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Chapter 7: Pure Competition McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved Four Basic Market Models Economists group industries into four market structures: Perfect competition: large number of sellers, standardized product, easy entry and exit Monopolistic competition: large number of sellers, differentiated product, easy entry and exit Oligopoly: small number of sellers, standardized or differentiated product, limited entry Pure monopoly: one seller, unique product, no entry LO: 7-1 7-2 Characteristics of Pure Competition Very large numbers of independently acting sellers who offer their products in large markets. Standardized product: firms produce a product that is identical or homogenous. Firms are “price takers”: the firm cannot change the market price but can only accept it as “given” and adjust to it. Free entry and exit: no barriers to entry exist. LO: 7-2 7-3 Demand as Seen by A Purely Competitive Firm A purely competitive firm sees its demand as perfectly elastic (horizontal demand curve). Thus, average revenue (AR) is equal to price (P). Total revenue (TR) is equal to price times quantity sold (Q). Because the price is constant, marginal revenue (MR) is also equal to price. TR = P x Q AR=TR ÷ Q MR=change in TR ÷ change in Q Graphically… LO: 7-3 7-4 $1179 P Firm’s Revenue Data 917 QD TR $131 0 131 1 131 2 131 3 131 4 131 5 131 6 131 7 131 8 131 9 131 10 TR 1048 $0 131 262 393 524 655 786 917 1048 1179 1310 MR ] $131 ] 131 ] 131 ] 131 ] 131 ] 131 ] 131 ] 131 ] 131 ] 131 Price and Revenue Firm’s Demand Schedule (Average Revenue) 786 655 524 393 262 D = MR = AR 131 2 4 6 8 10 12 Quantity Demanded (Sold) LO: 7-3 7-5 Profit Maximization in the Short Run A purely competitive firm is a price taker, thus it can maximize its economic profit only by adjusting its output. In the short run, the firm can adjust its variable resources to achieve the output level that maximizes profit. In deciding how much to produce, the firm will compare the marginal revenue and marginal cost of each successive unit of output. LO: 7-3 7-6 MR=MC Rule MR=MC rule is used to determine the total output at which economic profit is at a maximum (or losses are at a minimum) - label this output level q*. In perfect competition, because P=MR, we can restate this rule as P=MC. MR=MC Rule: •If producing is preferable to shutting down, the firm should produce any unit of output for which marginal revenue exceeds its marginal cost. •If the marginal cost of a unit of output exceeds its marginal revenue, the firm should not produce that unit. LO: 7-3 7-7 Profit Maximization and Loss Minimization in the Short Run Profit Maximization If P>ATC at q* (where MR=MC), the firm will realize an economic profit equal to q*(P – ATC)>0. Loss Minimization If P<ATC but exceeds the minimum AVC, q* output level will minimize losses, equal to q*(P – ATC)<0. Firm Shutdown If P falls below the minimum AVC, the competitive firm will minimize its losses in the short run by shutting down, because the total revenue that it would get from producing is less than the variable costs of production. LO: 7-3 7-8 Applying MR=MC Rule (1) Total Product (Output) 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 LO: 7-3 (2) Average Fixed Cost (AFC) $100.00 50.00 33.33 25.00 20.00 16.67 14.29 12.50 11.11 10.00 (3) Average Variable Cost (AVC) (4) Average Total Cost (ATC) $90.00 $190.00 85.00 135.00 80.00 113.33 75.00 100.00 74.00 94.00 75.00 91.67 77.14 91.43 81.25 93.75 86.67 97.78 93.00 103.00 (5) Marginal Cost (MC) $90 80 70 60 70 80 90 110 130 150 (6) Marginal Revenue (MR) (7) Profit (+) or Loss (-) $131 131 131 131 131 131 131 131 131 131 $-100 -59 -8 +53 +124 +185 +236 +277 +298 +299 +280 Surprise - Now Let’s GraphNow? It… DoNo You See Profit Maximization 7-9 Applying MR=MC Rule Cost and Revenue $200 150 MR = MC P=$131 MC MR = P ATC Economic Profit 100 AVC ATC=$97.78 50 0 LO: 7-3 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Output 7-10 Supply Schedule of a Competitive Firm Continuing the Same Example… LO: 7-4 Quantity Maximum Profit (+) Price Supplied or Minimum Loss (-) $151 10 $+480 131 9 +299 111 8 +138 91 7 -3 81 6 -64 71 0 -100 61 0 -100 The schedule shows the quantity a firm will produce at a variety of prices 7-11 Short-Run Supply Curve Cost and Revenues (Dollars) Firms produce where MR=MC LO: 7-4 e P5 P3 P2 P1 MR5 d P4 MC ATC c AVC b a MR4 MR3 MR2 MR1 This Price is Below AVC So Firm will not be Producing 0 Q2 Q3 Q4 Quantity Supplied Q5 7-12 Short-Run Supply Curve Cost and Revenues (Dollars) Examine the MC for the Competitive Firm MC Above AVC Becomes the Short-Run Supply Curve Break-even (Normal Profit) Point P5 P4 P3 P2 P1 0 MC MR5 d ATC c AVC b a MR4 MR3 MR2 MR1 Shut-Down Point (If P is Below) This Price is Below AVC And Will Not Be Produced LO: 7-4 e S Q2 Q3 Q4 Quantity Supplied Q5 7-13 Industry Equilibrium The individual supply curves of each of the identical firms in an industry are summed horizontally to get the total (market) supply curve. Industry equilibrium price and quantity are determined by the intersection of total; market, supply, and total; or market and demand. LO: 7-5 7-14 Profit Maximization in the Long Run Assume that in the long run in a competitive industry The only adjustment is the entry or exit of firms All firms in the industry have identical cost curves The industry is a constant cost industry Then, in the long run, product price will be exactly equal to, and production will occur at, each firm’s minimum average total cost. Firms seek profit and shun losses Firms are free to enter and leave the industry LO: 7-5 7-15 Long-Run Equilibrium Single Firm P=MC=Minimum ATC (Normal Profit) Market MC S Price Price ATC MR P P D 0 Qf Quantity LO: 7-5 0 Qe Quantity Productive Efficiency: Price = minimum ATC Allocative Efficiency: Price = MC Pure competition has both in its long-run equilibrium. 7-16 Long-Run Supply Curve In a constant cost industry, resource prices are not affected by the number of firms, thus Long-run supply curve is horizontal. In an increasing-cost industry the entry of new firms raise the prices for resources and thus increases their production costs, thus As the industry expands, it produces a larger output at a higher product price. The result is a long-run supply curve that is upward-sloping. In a decreasing-cost industry, firms experience lower costs as the industry expands, thus Long-run supply curve is downward-sloping. LO: 7-6 7-17