Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Perfect Competition Output Decisions: Revenues, Costs, and Profit Maximization perfect competition An industry structure in which there are many firms, each small relative to the industry, producing virtually identical products and in which no firm is large enough to have any control over prices. In perfectly competitive industries, new competitors can freely enter and exit the market. homogeneous products Undifferentiated products; products that are identical to, or indistinguishable from, one another. The Theory of Perfect Competition • Basics: A market structure is a firm’s particular environment, the characteristics of which influence the firm’s pricing and decision making. • Perfect Competition Theory is a theory of market structure. Perfect Competition Assumptions • There are many sellers and many buyers, none of which is large in relation to total sales or purchases. • Each firm produces and sells a homogeneous product. • Buyers and sellers have all relevant information about prices, product quality, sources of supply, and so forth. • Firms have easy entry and exit. – Both buyers and sellers are price takers. – The number of firms is large. – There are no barriers to entry. – The firms' products are identical. – There is complete information. – Firms are profit maximizers Output Decisions: Revenues, Costs, and Profit Maximization Perfect Competition FIGURE 8.9 Demand Facing a Single Firm In a Perfectly Competitive Market If a representative firm in a perfectly competitive market raises the price of its output above $2.45, the quantity demanded of that firm’s output will drop to zero. Each firm faces a perfectly elastic demand curve, d. 5 of 48 Output Decisions: Revenues, Costs, and Profit Maximization Comparing Costs and Revenues to Maximize Profit The Profit-Maximizing Level of Output FIGURE 8.10 The Profit-Maximizing Level of Output for a Perfectly Competitive Firm If price is above marginal cost, as it is at 100 and 250 units of output, profits can be increased by raising output; each additional unit increases revenues by more than it costs to produce the additional output. Beyond q* = 300, however, added output will reduce profits. At 340 units of output, an additional unit of output costs more to produce than it will bring in revenue when sold on the market. Profit-maximizing output is thus q*, the point at which P* = MC. 6 of 48 Output Decisions: Revenues, Costs, and Profit Maximization Comparing Costs and Revenues to Maximize Profit The Profit-Maximizing Level of Output As long as marginal revenue is greater than marginal cost, even though the difference between the two is getting smaller, added output means added profit. Whenever marginal revenue exceeds marginal cost, the revenue gained by increasing output by 1 unit per period exceeds the cost incurred by doing so. The profit-maximizing perfectly competitive firm will produce up to the point where the price of its output is just equal to short-run marginal cost—the level of output at which P* = MC. The profit-maximizing output level for all firms is the output level where MR = MC. 7 of 48 Perfectly Competitive Firms are Price Takers • A price taker is a seller that does not have the ability to control the price of the product it sells; it takes the price determined in the market. • A firms is restrained from being anything but a price taker if it finds itself one among many firms where its supply is small relative to the total market supply, and it sells a homogeneous product in an environment where buyers and sellers have all relevant information. Output Decisions: Revenues, Costs, and Profit Maximization Comparing Costs and Revenues to Maximize Profit A Numerical Example TABLE 8.6 Profit Analysis for a Simple Firm (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) q TFC TVC MC P = MR (6) TR (P x q) $ $ $ 0 $ - 15 0 (7) TC (TFC + TVC) $ 10 (8) PROFIT (TR - TC) 0 $ 10 $ -10 1 10 10 10 15 15 20 -5 2 10 15 5 15 30 25 5 3 10 20 5 15 45 30 15 4 10 30 10 15 60 40 20 5 10 50 20 15 75 60 15 6 10 80 30 15 90 90 0 9 of 48 The Demand Curve for a Perfectly Competitive Firm is Horizontal! • The market , composed of all buyers and sellers, establishes the equilibrium price. • When the equilibrium price has been established, a single perfectly competitive firm faces a horizontal demand curve (perfectly elastic) at the equilibrium price. So, the firm is a price taker; it takes the equilibrium price established by the market and sells any and all quantities of output at this price. • If a firm tries to charge a price higher than the equilibrium price, it won’t be able to do so. This is because the firm sells homogeneous product, its supply is small relative to the total market supply, and all the buyers are well informed about where they can obtain the product at the lowest price. The Marginal Revenue Curve of a Perfectly Competitive Curve is the Same as its Demand Curve • The firm’s marginal revenue is the change in total revenue that results from selling one additional unit of output. • Notice that marginal revenue at any output level is always equal to the equilibrium price. For a perfectly competitive firm, price is equal to marginal revenue. • The marginal revenue curve for the perfectly competitive firm is the same as its demand curve. The Demand Curve and the Marginal Revenue Curve for a Perfectly Competitive Firm Theory and Real World Markets • A market that does not meet the assumptions of perfect competition may nonetheless approximate those assumptions to such a degree that it behaves as if it were a perfectly competitive market. If so, the theory of perfect competition can be used to predict the market’s behavior. • (in reality, the number of sellers may not be large enough for every firm to be a price taker, but the firm’s control over price may be negligible. Similarly buyers may not have all relevant information concerning prices and quality, again it may be negligible) Perfect Competition in the Short Run • The firm will continue to increase its quantity of output as long as marginal revenue is greater than marginal cost. • The firm will stop increasing its quantity of output when marginal revenue and marginal cost are equal • The Profit – Maximization Rule: Produce the quantity of output at which MR=MC • In perfect competition, P = MR = MC The Quantity of Output the Perfectly Competitive Firm Will Produce The firm’s demand curve is horizontal at the equilibrium price. Its demand curve is its marginal revenue curve. The firm produces that quantity of output at which MR=MC Allocative efficiency and perfect competition • Resource Allocative Efficiency: the situation occurs when produce the quantity of output at which price equals marginal cost: P = MC. • Producing a good until price equals marginal cost ensures that all units of the good are produced that are of greater value to buyers than the alternative goods that might have been produced. (example) Profit Maximization and Loss Minimization for the Perfectly Competitive Firm: Three Cases Profit Maximization and Loss Minimization for Perfect Competition • A firm produces in the short run as long as price is above average variable cost. • A firm shuts down in the short run if price is less than average variable cost. • A firm produces in the short run as long as total revenue is greater than total variable costs. • A firm shuts down in the short run if total revenue is less than total variable costs. What Should a Firm Do in the Short Run? The firm should produce in the short run as long as price (P) is above average variable cost (AVC). It should shut down in the short run if price is below average variable cost. Perfectly Competitive Firm’s Short-Run Supply Curve • Only a price above average variable cost will induce the firm to supply output. • The Short-Run supply curve is that portion of the firm’s marginal cost curve that lies above the average variable cost curve. Deriving the Market (Industry) Supply Curve 22 Perfect Competition In The Long Run The following conditions characterize long run equilibrium: 1. Economic profit is Zero: Price is equal to short-run average total cost (SRATC). If P > SRATC → positive economic profit → entry If P < SRATC → loss → exit 2. Firms are producing the quantity of output at which Price is equal to Marginal Cost (MC) or MR=MC 3. No firm has an incentive to change its plant size to produce its current output; that is, SRATC=LRATC at the quantity of output at which P=MC. (if SRATC > LRATC then firm has an incentive to change the plant size) Long-Run Competitive Equilibrium 24 Long Run Competitive Equilibrium Exists When The Following Occur • There is no incentive for firms to enter or exit the industry • There is no incentive for firms to produce more or less output. • There is no incentive for firms to change plant size. Condition: P = MC = SRATC = LRATC. The Perfectly Competitive Firm and Resource Allocative Efficiency For the perfectly competitive firm, P=MR. Also, the firm maximizes profits or minimizes losses by producing that quantity of output at which MR=MC. Because P=MR and MR=MC, it follows that P=MC, that is the perfectly competitive firm exhibits resource allocative efficiency. The Revenue of a Competitive Firm • Total revenue (TR) TR = P x Q • Average revenue (AR) TR =P AR = Q • Marginal revenue (MR): The change in TR from selling one more unit. 27 ∆TR MR = ∆Q ACTIVE LEARNING 1 Calculating TR, AR, MR Fill in the empty spaces of the table. Q P TR 0 $10 n/a 1 $10 $10 2 $10 3 $10 4 $10 AR MR $40 $10 5 $10 $50 28 ACTIVE LEARNING 1 Answers Fill in the empty spaces of the table. Q P TR = P x Q 0 $10 $0 AR = TR Q MR = ∆TR ∆Q n/a $10 1 2 3 $10 $10 $10 Notice that $20 $10 MR = P $10 $30 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 4 $10 $40 $10 $10 5 $10 $50 $10 29 Profit Maximization (continued from earlier exercise) At any Q with MR > MC, increasing Q raises profit. At any Q with MR < MC, reducing Q raises profit. FIRMS IN COMPETITIVE Q TR TC 0 $0 $5 –$5 1 10 9 1 2 20 15 5 3 30 23 7 4 40 33 7 5 50 45 30 Profit MR MC 5 Profit = MR – MC $10 $4 $6 10 6 4 10 8 2 10 10 0 10 12 –2 Profit-Maximizing Level of Output • Since profit is the difference between total revenue and total cost, what happens to profit in response to a change in output is determined by marginal revenue (MR) and marginal cost • (MC). A firm maximizes profit when MC = MR. • Marginal revenue (MR) – the change in total revenue associated with a change in quantity. • Marginal cost (MC) -- the change in total cost associated with a change in quantity. • Since a perfect competitor accepts the market price as given, for a competitive firm, marginal revenue is price (MR = P). • Thus, the profit-maximizing condition of a competitive firm is MC = MR = P Costs Relevant to a Firm Profit Maximization for a Competitive Firm Total P = MR Output Total Cost Marginal Average Total Cost Revenue Cost 35.00 35.00 35.00 35.00 35.00 35.00 35.00 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 118.00 130.00 147.00 169.00 199.00 239.00 293.00 14.00 12.00 17.00 22.00 30.00 40.00 54.00 29.50 26.00 24.50 24.14 24.88 26.56 29.30 140.00 175.00 210.00 245.00 280.00 315.00 350.00 Profit TR-TC 22.00 45.00 63.00 76.00 81.00 76.00 57.00 Determining Profits Graphically MC MC MC Price Price Price 65 65 65 60 60 60 55 55 55 ATC 50 50 50 ATC 45 45 45 40 40 D A P = MR 40 P = MR Loss 35 35 35 P = MR Profit 30 30 30 B ATC AVC 25 25 C 25 AVC AVC E 20 20 20 15 15 15 10 10 10 5 5 5 0 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 910 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 12 Quantity Quantity Quantity (b) Zero profit case (a) Profit case (c) Loss case Irwin/McGraw-Hill © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000 Shutdown vs. Exit • Shutdown: A short-run decision not to produce anything because of market conditions. • Exit: A long-run decision to leave the market. • A key difference: – If shut down in SR, must still pay FC. – If exit in LR, zero costs. FIRMS IN COMPETITIVE 34 A Firm’s Short-run Decision to Shut Down • Cost of shutting down: revenue loss = TR • Benefit of shutting down: cost savings = VC (firm must still pay FC) • So, shut down if TR < VC • Divide both sides by Q: • So, firm’s decision rule is: TR/Q < VC/Q Shut down if P < AVC 35 The Shutdown Point • The firm will shut down if it cannot cover average variable costs. – A firm should continue to produce as long as price is greater than average variable cost. – Once price falls below that point it makes sense to shut down temporarily and save the variable costs. – The shutdown point is the point at which the firm will gain more by shutting down than it will by staying in business. – As long as total revenue is more than total variable cost, temporarily producing at a loss is the firm’s best strategy since it is taking less of a loss than it would by shutting down. The Shutdown Decision MC Price 60 ATC 50 40 Loss P = MR 30 AVC 20 $17.80 A 10 0 2 4 6 8 Quantity The Irrelevance of Sunk Costs • Sunk cost: a cost that has already been committed and cannot be recovered • Sunk costs should be irrelevant to decisions; you must pay them regardless of your choice. • FC is a sunk cost: The firm must pay its fixed costs whether it produces or shuts down. • So, FC should not matter in the decision to shut down. 39