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Transcript
AP MICROECONOMICS Graph SUMMARY
Supply & Demand
Price
2015
Monopolistic Competition Long Run
Price
S1
MC
-------------- E1
-------------
P1
P
D1
MR
Q1
0
TIPSEN: shifts Demand & TINE-TP shifts Supply
Price Floor:
surplus of supply above mkt equilibrium
Price Ceiling: shortage of supply below mkt equilibrium
Floors & Ceilings both produce Deadweight Loss
Market System Equilibrium
P.C.
M.C.
Olig.
MC = MR
equal
greater
greater
greater
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Economic Profit Long Run
No
No
Yes
Yes
Shape of Demand Curve
Flat
Downward
Downward
downward
Price relative to Marginal Revenue
Equal
Greater
Greater
Greater
No
No
No
Economic Profit Short Run
Produce at minimum of ATC
Long run—
Deadweight loss (long run)
Yes
MC = MR
Quantity
produced
Quantity
Efficient
scale
Short Run: They can earn profit
Long Run: Due to easy entry/exit—firms enter when
profit exist. An Individual firms demand curve eventually
shifts left and Equilibrium is where ATC is tangent to the
Demand Curve. While economic Profit = 0 there is still
deadweight loss as P > MC and excess capacity
Monop
MC = MR
Price relative to MC
(equal, greater or less than)
Demand
Qty
T-Shirts
Maximize Profit when: MC = _?_
ATC
Oligopoly Equilibrium
MC= MR
Costs and
Revenue
B
Monopoly
price
Average total cost
A
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Every firm maximizes profit where MR = MC
Only in perfect competition does P = MC , rest P > MC
Allocative efficiency is when P = MC (no deadweight loss)
Productive efficiency is production at minimum of ATC
All market structures can earn profit in short run
Perfect competition maximizes total welfare
Other market structures produce deadweight loss P ≠ MC
Marginal revenue
0
Q
QMAX
Quantity
Q
Similar to monopoly equilibrium. If oligopolies use
“perfect” collusion, their equilibrium is identical
Game Theory argues for the non-cooperative equilibrium
Profit in short & long run, deadweight loss
Monopoly Equilibrium
Perfect Competition Long Run
Price
Demand
Marginal
cost
(short run & Long run)
Costs and
Revenue
MC
ATC
B
Monopoly
price
P1
Average total cost
A
Demand
Marginal
cost
0
Quantity
Individual firms are price takers (P = MR = AR)
Demand Curve: flat & equal to MR curve (for 1-firm)
Entire Market Demand Curve is still downward sloping
Short run: can earn profit & allocatively efficient (P = MC)
Long run: Economic profit = 0 No incentive to enter/exit
Produce at efficient scale (min ATC) which is productive
efficiency. Perfect entry/exit, homogeneous products
ensures efficiency & self-regulation
Marginal revenue
0
Q
QMAX
Q
Quantity
Monopolies earn economic profit in both the long & short
run. Price > MC & restricted entry/exit prevent entry into
the market despite high profit levels. DWL exists.
Only by using “perfect” price discrimination can
deadweight loss be completely eliminated as P = MC
Elasticity & MR Curve
Externalities
MSC
Price
Unit Elastic
Elastic range
MC
)
Inelastic Range
Spillover
Cost
Optimum
-----------------
●
P1
Equilibrium MC = MB
D
MB
MR
Demand curves have both elastic & inelastic ranges
When MR = 0 , demand is unit elastic and total revenue
is maximized. Firms operate in Elastic range. Only if MC
= ZERO, then firms would produce at unit elasticity
0
Quantity
QOPTIMUM QMARKET
Efficient equilibrium is MB = MC unless there are
spillover benefits or costs (which are not counted)
DWL for society. Tax negative externality to fix
Graph above: negative externality
Since some social costs are not counted, MSC > MC
Elasticity, Taxes & Deadweight Loss
(c) Inelastic Demand
FACTOR MARKET
Price
Supply
Size of tax
When demand is
relatively inelastic,
the deadweight loss
of a tax is small.
Demand
Quantity
0
Taxes & Subsidies both create deadweight loss
Taxes shift either S or D curve by size of tax (creates wedge)
Size of DWL is related to elasticity of demand/supply.
With inelastic curves, deadweight loss is small. (see graph)
New taxes raise tax burden on both buyer & seller.
All input (factor) markets (labor, capital, etc) find
equilibrium when Demand = Supply. All firms become
“wage/price takers” at the current market price for a factor.
Competitive Factor Markets (1 firm)
WAGE
Tax incidence is not based on who the tax is levied on!
More inelastic curve bears most of tax burden (tax incidence!)
Supply
A
B
QM
E
D
MRPC
QC
Qty
F
Demand
0
MRPM
C
Price
without tax = P1
Price
sellers = PS
receive
---------------
Price
buyers = PB
pay
MFC = Wage Rate
w1
---------------
Price
Q2
Quantity
Q1
Consumer Surplus falls, Deadweight Loss = C + E
Tax Revenue = B + D
Lorenz Curve
Since Individual firms are wage takers => they see a
horizontal MFCL ----which means they can hire more
workers without affecting wage rate. Market Power Firms
(monopoly, oligopoly…) hire less inputs ( MRPM < MRPC)
MRP = MPinput * MRoutput
MFC = cost of input
If hiring 2 factors use Least cost rule: MPL/PL = MPK/PK
MONOPSONY
MFCM
Lorenz Curve A
S
Line of Perfect equality
Wage
----------------
-------------
WC --------------------WM
Shows distribution of income
Gini-coefficient measures inequality and is a number
between 0 and 1. Higher number means more inequality
Should not have to draw on test but will have to interpret
graph.
------------------
Lorenz Curve B
DL = MRPL
LM LC Qty-Labor
Just know the bottom line: A monopsony is a firm that is
a monopoly in the LABOR market. This will lead to a
MFC curve above a market labor supply curve because to
hire more workers => wages must rise for all workers
End Result: higher less workers at lower wage rate