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Competitive Markets in the Long Run • New firms can enter the market • Existing firms can exit the market • Profit and loss in the long run – Economic profit - outsiders enter the market – Economic losses - firms exit the market 1 From SR Profit to LR Equilibrium – Economic profit attracts new entrants – Market supply curve - shift rightward – Market price - falls – Demand curve facing each firm - shifts downward – Each firm - decrease output • Positive economic profit - attracts new entrants until economic profit = 0 2 Long-Run Equilibrium • Figure 8 From Short-Run Profit to Long-Run Equilibrium Market S1 Price per Bushel A $4.50 Firm Dollars so each firm earns an economic profit. MC With initial supply curve S1, market A price is $4.50… $4.50 d ATC 1 D 900,000 Bushels per Year 9,000 Bushels per Year 3 Long-Run Equilibrium • Figure 8 From Short-Run Profit to Long-Run Equilibrium Market Firm S1 Price per Bushel S2 Dollars MC A $4.50 2.50 A d ATC 1 $4.50 E E 2.50 d2 D 900,000 1,200,000 Bushels 5,000 9,000 per Year until market price falls to Profit attracts entry, shifting $2.50 and each firm earns the supply curve rightward… zero economic profit. Bushels per Year 4 From SR Loss to LR Equilibrium – Economic losses - firms exit the market – Market supply curve - shift leftward – Market price - rises – Demand curve facing each firm - shifts upward • Economic loses – firms exit until economic loss = 0 • In the LR, firms earn “normal profit” zero economic profit 5 Perfect Competition and Plant Size • In LR equilibrium, every firm will select – Plant size – Output level • And – Operate at minimum point of LRATC curve 6 Perfect Competition and Plant Size • Figure 9 Perfect Competition and Plant Size 3. As all firms increase plant size and output, market price falls to its lowest possible level . . . Dollars LRATC LRATC 1. With its current plant and ATC curve the firm earns zero economic profit. Dollars MC1 ATC1 d1 = MR1 MC2 ATC P1 2 E P* q1 Output per Period 2. The firm could earn positive profit with a larger plant, producing here d2 = MR2 Output per Period 4. and all firms earn zero economic profit and produce at minimum 7 LRATC. q* A Summary of the Competitive Firm in the LR • In long-run equilibrium, the competitive firm produces Q where: • • MC=minimum ATC=minimum LRATC=P • Consumers are getting the best deal they could possibly get 8 An Increase in Demand • Short-run – Rise in market price – Rise in market quantity – Economic profits • Long-run – Market equilibrium changes • The long-run supply curve – Relationship between market price and market quantity - after all long-run adjustments have taken place 9 Constant Cost Industry • Entry has no effect on input prices • Industry output has no effect on individual firms’ cost curves • Horizontal long-run supply curve • The industry – supplies any amount of output demanded – at an unchanged price 10 Constant-Cost Industry • Figure 10 A Constant-Cost Industry INITIAL EQUILIBRIUM Market Price per Unit Firm Dollars MC S1 P1 P1 A A ATC LRATC d1 = MR1 D1 Q1 Output per Period q1 Output per Period 11 Constant Cost Industry • Figure 10 Price per Unit A Constant Cost Industry NEW EQUILIBRIUM Market S1 B PSR Firm Dollars B PSR dSR = MRSR S2 ATC LRATC d1 = MR1 C P1 SLR A P1 MC A D2 D1 Q1 QSR Output per Q2 Period q1 qSR Output per Period 12 Increasing Cost Industry • Entry causes input prices to rise • Each firm’s LRATC curve shifts upward as industry output increases • Zero economic profit occurs at a higher price • The long-run supply curve slopes upward 13 Increasing Cost Industry • Figure 11 An Increasing Cost Industry Market Price per Unit S1 B PSR Firm Dollars S2 C SLR P2 P2 C P1 P1 A A LRATC2 LRATC1 d2 = MR2 d1 = MR1 D2 D1 Q1 Q2 Output per Period q1 Output per Period 14 Decreasing Cost Industry • Entry by new firms decreases input prices • Each firm’s LRATC curve shifts downward as industry output increases • Zero economic profit occurs at a lower price • The long-run supply curve slopes downward 15 Decreasing Cost Industry • Figure 12 A Decreasing Cost Industry Market Price per Unit S1 PSR P1 LRATC1 B S2 A P1 C P2 SLR D1 Q1 Firm Dollars Q2 A P2 C d1 = MR1 LRATC2 d2 = MR2 D2 Output per Period q1 Output per Period 16 Market Signals and the Economy • Market signals – Price changes - cause changes in production to match changes in consumer demand • Demand increases - price rises – signals firms to enter the market – industry output increases • Demand decreases –price falls – signals firms to exit the market – industry output decreases 17 A Change in Technology • A technological advance – rightward shift of the market supply curve – market price decreases – Short run - economic profit – Long run - zero economic profit • Firms that refuse to use the new technology will not survive. 18 A Change in Technology • Figure 13 Technological Change in Perfect Competition Firm Market Price per Bushel Dollars per Bushel S1 LRATC1 S2 $3 LRATC2 d1 = MR1 2 d2= MR A $3 B 2 D Q1 Q2 Bushels per Day 1000 Bushels per Day 19 Solar Power: Increasing Cost Industry • Generating electricity from solar panels – costs more than twice as much as generating the same energy from fossil fuels • With government help – by 2006, Germany became the world’s largest producer of solar energy • The growth slowed dramatically in early 2006 – even though the subsidies and incentives remained • The solar panel industry - increasing cost 20 Solar Power • Figure 14 The Global Market For Solar Panels Price (Dollars per peak watt) S2003 B $5.00 3.50 Price (Dollars per peak watt) Market S2005 Firm LRATC2005 C C $5.00 3.50 A A d2 = MR2 LRATC2003 d1 = MR1 D2005 D2003 750 1,750 Quantity of Solar Panels (Megawatts) q1 Quantity of Solar Panels (Megawatts) 21 Solar Power • Figure 15 The Global Market For Polysilicon Price per kilogram S2003 $70 F 32 E D2005 D2003 27 Quantity of Polysilicon (Millions of Kilograms per Year) 22