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8
The Firm and the Industry
Under Perfect Competition
Competition . . . brings about the only . . . arrangement of social
production which is possible. . . . [Otherwise] what guarantee [do] we
have that the necessary quantity and not more of each product will be
produced, that we shall not go hungry in regard to corn and meat while
we are choked in beet sugar and drowned in potato spirit, that we shall
not lack trousers to cover our nakedness while buttons flood us in
millions?
FRIEDRICH ENGELS (THE FRIEND AND CO-AUTHOR OF KARL MARX)
Contents
● Perfect Competition Defined
● The Competitive Firm
● The Competitive Industry
● Perfect Competition and Economic
Efficiency
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
Perfect Competition Defined
● Four Principal Market Types
♦ Perfect competition
♦ Monopolistic competition
♦ Oligopoly
♦ Pure monopoly
Copyright© 2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning All rights reserved.
Perfect Competition Defined
● Perfect competition
♦ Many small firms and customers
♦ Homogeneous product
♦ Free entry and exit
♦ Well-informed producers and consumers
Copyright© 2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning All rights reserved.
The Competitive Firm
● Perfect competition
♦ Firm is a price taker.
♦ Price is set in the market.
♦ Firm is too small to affect the market.
Copyright© 2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning All rights reserved.
The Competitive Firm
● The Firm’s Demand Curve under Perfect
Competition
♦ Horizontal
♦ Can sell as much as it wants at the market
price.
Copyright© 2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning All rights reserved.
8-1 Demand Curve for a
Firm under Perfect Competition
FIGURE
Price per Bushel
in Chicago
D
A
B
C
Industry
supply
curve
E
$3
$3
S
Industry
demand
curve
Firm’s demand
curve
S
D
0
1
2
3
4
0
100 200 300 400
Truckloads of Corn
Sold by Farmer Jasmine
per Year
Total Sales in Chicago
in Thousands of Truckloads
per Year
(a)
(b)
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
The Competitive Firm
● Short-Run Equilibrium for the Perfectly
Competitive Firm
♦ Marginal revenue = price
♦ Profit-maximizing level of output: marginal
cost = price
♦ MC = MR
Copyright© 2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning All rights reserved.
8-1 Revenues, Costs, and
Profits of a Competitive Firm
TABLE
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
The Competitive Firm
● D = MR = AR at all levels of output
● Short-Run
D = MR = Equilibrium
AR = MC at the equilibrium
level of output
Copyright© 2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning All rights reserved.
8-2 S-R Equilibrium of
the Competitive Firm
Revenue and Cost per Bushel
FIGURE
MC
AC
B
$3.00
2.25
D = MR = AR
A
1.50
0
50,000
Bushels of Corn per Year
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
Short-Run Profit: Graphic
Representation
● The MC = P condition does not show if the
firm is making a profit or incurring a loss.
● Compare price (average revenue) with
average cost to calculate profit or loss per
unit.
● The profit-maximizing output may lead to a
loss, but if so it is the minimum possible
loss.
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
8-3 S-R Equilibrium of
Competitive Firm w/Lower Price
MC
per Bushel
Revenue and Cost
FIGURE
AC
A
$2.25
1.50
0
B
D = MR = P
30,000
Bushels of Corn per Year
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
Short-Run Profit: Graphic
Representation
● The MC = P condition does not show if the
firm is making a profit or incurring a loss.
● Compare price (average revenue) with
average cost to calculate profit or loss per
unit.
● The profit-maximizing output may lead to a
loss, but if so it is the minimum possible
loss.
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
Shutdown and Break-Even
Analysis
● Rule 1: The firm will make a profit if total
revenue (TR) > total cost (TC)
● Should not plan to shut down in either the
short run or the long run.
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
Shutdown and Breakeven
Analysis
● Rule 2: Even if TR < TC, the firm should
continue to operate in the short run as long
as TR > TVC.
● If TR > TVC, the firm can at least pay some
of its fixed costs.
● The firm should close in the long run if TR
< TC.
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
8-2 The Shutdown
Decision
TABLE
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
Shutdown and Breakeven
Analysis
● The competitive firm will produce nothing
unless price lies above the minimum point
on the AVC curve.
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
FIGURE
8-4 Shutdown Analysis
MC
Price
P3
P2
B
A
AC AVC
P3
P2
P1
P1
0
Quantity Supplied
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
The Competitive Firm’s Short-run
Supply Curve
● Horizontal  individual supply curves 
market supply curve
● Method analogous to the construction of a
market demand curve from individual
demand curves.
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
8-5 Derivation of the
Industry Supply Curve
FIGURE
e
$3.00
c
2.25
s
S
Price per Bushel
Price per Bushel
s
E
$3.00
C
2.25
S
45 50
45 50
Quantity Supplied in
Thousands of Bushels
Quantity Supplied in
Millions of Bushels
(a)
(b)
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
The Competitive Industry
● The Competitive Industry’s Short-Run
Supply Curve
♦ A competitive industry has a stable equilibrium
at the output where supply equals demand.
♦ The competitive industry (unlike the
competitive firm) faces a downward sloping
demand curve.
Copyright© 2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning All rights reserved.
8-6 Supply-Demand
Equil. of a Competitive Industry
FIGURE
S
Price per Bushel
D
$3.75
E
3.00
C
2.25
A
D
S
0
45 50
72
Quantity of Corn in
Millions of Bushels
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
The Competitive Industry
● Industry Equilibrium in the Short Run
♦ Economic costs include opportunity costs, so
zero economic profit means that firms are
earning the normal, economy-wide rate of
profit.
♦ Freedom of entry and exit guarantee this result
in the long run under perfect competition.
Copyright© 2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning All rights reserved.
The Competitive Industry
● Industry and Firm Equilibrium in the Long
Run
♦ In the long run, firms enter or exit the industry
in response to profits or losses.
♦ This shifts the supply curve and the price until
profits are zero.
♦ In long-run, competitive equilibrium, P = MC =
AC.
Copyright© 2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning All rights reserved.
8-7 A Shift in the Industry
Supply Curve
FIGURE
Price per Bushel
(1,000 firms)
S0
D
E
(1,600 firms)
S1
F
$3.00
A
2.25
S0
D
S1
50
72 80
Quantity of Corn in
Millions of Bushels
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
8-8 The Competitive Firm
and the Competitive Industry
FIGURE
Firm
Industry
MC
(1,000 firms)
S0
e
$3.00
2.25
a
D0
D1
b
40 45 50
Quantity of Corn in
Thousands of Bushels
(a)
Price per Bushel
Price per Bushel
AC
D
E
$3.00
(1,600 firms)
S1
A
2.25
S0
D
S1
50
72
Quantity of Corn in
Millions of Bushels
(b)
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
8-9 L-R Equilibrium of the
Competitive Firm and Industry
FIGURE
Firm
Industry
AC
m
$1.87
D2
Price per Bushel
Price per Bushel
MC
D
(2,075 firms)
S2
M
$1.87
S2
83
40
Quantity of Corn in
Thousands of Bushels
(a)
D
Quantity of Corn in
Millions of Bushels
(b)
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
The Competitive Industry
● The Long-Run Industry Supply Curve
■The long-run supply curve of the competitive
industry is also the industry’s long-run average cost
curve.
■The industry is driven to that supply curve by the
entry or exit of firms and by the adjustment of
firms already in the industry.
Copyright© 2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning All rights reserved.
8-10 S-R Industry Supply
and L-R Industry Average Cost
Price, Average Cost per Bushel
FIGURE
S
B
$2.62
LRAC
S
1.50
0
A
70
Output in
Millions of Bushels of Corn
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
Perfect Competition and
Economic Efficiency
● In the long run, competitive firms are driven
to produce at the minimum point of their
average cost curves.
● In this case, output is produced at the lowest
possible cost to society.
Copyright© 2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning All rights reserved.
8-3 Avg. Cost for the Firm
and Total Cost for the Industry
TABLE
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
?
Which is Better to Cut
Pollution: Carrot or Stick?
● The analysis of perfect competition can be
used to show that, if firms are offered a
subsidy to reduce their polluting emissions,
the industry is likely to increase its
emissions, because of free entry.
Copyright© 2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning All rights reserved.
8-11 Taxes vs Subsidies
as Incentives to Cut Pollution
FIGURE
T
Price, Average Cost
D
X
B
E
A
S
T
D
X
S
0
Qb
Qe
Qa
Output
Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.