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Long Run: Equilibrium P.C. • Profits and losses – are inconsistent with P.C. LR equilibrium – are signals to which firm owners respond causing industry supply to shift. • causing product prices to change eliminating profits & losses in the long run. • Profit = more firms enter and profit disappears • Loss = firms exit market and losses disappear Long Run Adjustment • 1.) Exit and Entry –stops when firms are making 0 economic profit. •2.) Change Size of Plant –stops when firms have the plant that coincides with the min. LRATC and firms are making 0 economic profit Long Run Adjustment Entry & Exit Initial Market Condition S MC Price ($) Price ($) ATC P d = MR 1 Break-even P=Min.ATC D Q1 Quantity of Sweaters (industry) q1 Quantity of Sweaters (firm) Long Run Adjustment Entry and Exit Increased cold weather increases demand for sweaters S MC d2 P Price ($) Price ($) ATC 2 P d1 1 Higher price creates economic profit D2 D1 Q1 Q2 Quantity of Sweaters (industry) q1 q2 Quantity of Sweaters (firm) Long Run Adjustment Entry and Exit Economic profit attracts new firms. Price falls to break-even point. S1 MC ATC Price ($) Price ($) S2 P d1 1 Break-even P=Min.ATC D2 D1 Q1 Quantity of Sweaters (industry) q1 Quantity of Sweaters (firm) Ease of Entry important for Long Run Adjustment Long Run Supply Constant Cost Industry S1 Price ($) S2 Demand shifts, offering profit to current firms. LRS More firms enter, shifting supply yet not increasing input costs. D2 Long run supply is horizontal. P 1 D1 Q1 Quantity of Sweaters (industry) Additional firms do not increase costs. Long Run Supply Increasing Cost Industry S1 Demand shifts, offering profit to current firms. S2 Price ($) LRS More firms enter, shifting supply yet increasing input costs P 1 D2 D1 Q1 Quantity of Sweaters (industry) Additional firms increase costs. Long run supply is upward sloping Long Run Supply Increasing Cost Industry S1 Demand shifts, offering profit to current firms. Price ($) S2 More firms enter, shifting supply yet decreasing input costs P 1 LRS D1 D2 Q1 Quantity of Sweaters (industry) Additional firms decrease costs. Long run supply is downward sloping Technological Change: Process of Adjustment • The first firms to adopt new technology will make a profit, other firms will eventually exit or switch – Composition of industry is varied consisting of new and old tech firms – Technological change brings temporary gains to producers • Lower prices and better products resulting from technological advance bring permanent gains to consumers Long Run Adjustment Price (dollars per sweater) Change Plant Size (Firm-wide) Short-run profit 40 maximizing point MC0 Changing plant size will Result in changed MC and Therefore SRAC curves SRAC0 LRAC MC1 SRAC1 25 MR0 20 MR1 m Long-run competitive equilibrium 14 6 8 Quantity (sweaters per day) Long-Run: Competitive Equilibrium Price per Unit MC SAC LAC E d = MR = P = MC=SRATC =LRATC P (= MR) = MC : SR equilibrium MC = SRATC : no incentive for firms to enter or leave Min LRATC : minimum per unit costs achieved so plant size is optimal Qe Quantity per Time Period In the Long Run: P=MC=minATC Long Run: Summary • Competition and the Desire for Profit – The forces that provide for both productive and allocative efficiency in PC markets in the long run • P = MC = min ATC (P.C. Long Run Equil.) – Indicates both productive and allocative efficiency. Micro Efficiency and the Long Run Productive Efficiency –Requires that each good in the optimal product mix be produced in the least costly way. • 1.) Productive Efficiency - occurs when • P = min ATC –firms produce at min ATC and receive a price =min ATC. Firms must use the best available, least-cost technology, or they will not survive. Allocative Efficiency –Requires resources be allocated to firms so as to obtain the optimal mix of products • 2.)Allocative Efficiency - occurs when • P = MC –resources are used to produce the total output whose composition best fits consumer preferences, the optimal product mix. Allocative Efficiency:P=MC Recall: Price of X – society’s measure of the relative worth of that product at the margin. • measures the extra benefit or value society gets from additional units of X (MSB – Marginal Social Benefit) Marginal Cost of X – society’s measure of the value of the other goods that the resources used in the production of an extra unit of X could otherwise have produced. • measures the sacrifice or opportunity cost to society of using resources to produce additional X (MSC – Marginal Social Cost) Allocative Efficiency • When P = MC \MSB = MSC • each good is produced to the point at which –society’s value of the last unit = society’s value of the alternative goods sacrificed by its production. Efficiency of the Equilibrium Quantity MC, MB $ B0 Consumer + Producer Surplus is Maximized Consumer Surplus Allocative Efficiency, MSC=MCB P* C0 MSC Producer Surplus MSB Q0 Q* Quantity Allocative Efficiency • When P = MC \MSB = MSC • each good is produced to the point at which –society’s value of the last unit = society’s value of the alternative goods sacrificed by its production. •economic well being is maximized; that is, consumer surplus + producer surplus, is maximized Summary: Perfect Competition & The Invisible Hand – Consumers and producers pursue their own self-interest and interact in markets. – Market transactions generate an efficient—highest valued—use of resources. Usefulness of the Perfectly Competitive Model • It reduces the complexity of reality into manageable size • It highlights the idea of an efficient allocation & use of resources • It shows the role of prices, profits and competition in the market system Usefulness of the Perfectly Competitive Model • Serves as a yardstick against which realworld market structures, resource allocation, prices, profits, competition and firm behaviour can be compared. • Acts as a guide to public policy and corrective action. Failure of Perfect Competition • Inefficient resource allocation can lead to MARKET FAILURE (ie: externalities and public goods) • PC firm are too small to engage in extensive R&D, slowing technological growth (ie: Microsoft wouldn’t be making so many advances if it where in a PC market) Monopoly a single seller of a product which has no close substitutes. Market power is the ability to influence the market price by influencing the total quantity offered for sale. Characteristics of Monopoly 1. Single seller • firm & industry are the same 2. Unique product 3. Barriers to entry 4. Good will advertising 5. Price maker/searcher Why do monopolies arise? • Barrier to Entry: something that prevents new firms from entering and competing 1. 2. • Key resources owned by a single firm. Government grants exclusive right (eg. patent) to produce product . Economies of Scale - Natural Monopoly: single firm can supply a product to an entire market at a lower per unit cost than could 2 or more firms. - Using economies of scale to predate and maintain monopoly power is illegal in Canada Price (cents per kilowatt-hour) Natural Monopoly •There are economies of scale over the relevant range of output. 1 firm can supply 4 million kWh at 5 cents/kWh 15 2 firms can supply 4 million kWh at 10 cents/kWh 10 4 firms can supply 4 million kWh at 15 cents/kWh 5 ATC D Demand cuts LAC to the left of the min. LAC 0 1 2 3 4 Quantity (millions of kilowatt-hours) Pricing & Output Decision: Monopolist • Monopolists have the ability to influence the output price by choosing the output level. • The firm’s demand curve is the market demand curve. • A monopolist’s MR is always less than price (except for the first unit) Marginal Revenue: Always Less Than Price Price of Electricity To sell 3 units, each unit sold for $8 To sell 4 units, each unit sold for $7 Lose $1/unit on 3 units or -$3 Gain $7 on the 4th unit or +$7 Net Gain (MR) = $4 (TR/ TO) 8 P = $8 TR = $24 Area B (-) Demand curve = AR curve 7 Loss = -$3 D Area A (+) Gain = $7 3 4 Quantity of Electricity per Time Period P = $7 TR = $28 To increase quantity sold – the monopolist lowers selling price – lowering price to sell an additional unit also lowers price on the previous units which previously would have sold for more. Price, and Marginal Revenue per Unit Demand & Marginal Revenue \Marginal revenue lies below D/AR for the monopolist P2 P1 P3 MR Q2 Q1 Q3 Quantity per Time Period D=AR Monopoly: Profit Max. Decision Ed’s Costs of Showing Movie $ C Film rental 1800 O Auditorium rental S Operator 50 T Ticket takers 100 TOTAL $2200 250 S Auditorium holds 700 people Ed’s Profit Maximizing Decision $1800 250 50 100 $2200 Demand (AR) 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 $ Per Ticket 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Costs Film Rental Auditorium Operator Ticket Takers Total Tickets Per Week What will Ed charge for admission to maximize profits? Profit Maximizing Rule • PRODUCE ALL THOSE UNITS FOR WHICH MC. – All costs are sunk/fixed: – TC = $2200 – MC = $0 Look at demand for revenue information P Q $ TR MR Profit $ $ $ 7 300 2100 TR/ TO 6 400 2400 3.00 200 5 500 2500 1.00 300 4 600 2400 -1.00 200 3 700 2100 TR-TC -100 MR TC=$2200 MC=0 The Profit Maximizing Decision Profit Maximization MR MC MC = 0 MR = 0 $ Per Ticket 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Demand (AR) 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 MR Tickets Per Week Q* = 500 P* = $5.00 TR TC $2500 $2200 Profit $300 Change Cost Conditions • Now suppose the distributor of the films changes the rental fee from a flat $1800 to $800 and $2.00 for every ticket sold. • TFC=$800 +$400 = $1200 Revenue Info Cost Info Demand FC = $1200 P,$’s Qn MR,$’s TC,$’s MC,$’s 7.00 300 6.00 400 3.00 2000 2.00 5.00 500 1.00 2200 2.00 4.00 600 -1.00 2400 2.00 1800 The Profit Max Decision when MC = $2.00 Profit Maximization MR MC MC = 2 MR = 2 $ Per Ticket 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Demand (AR) Q* = 400 P* = $6.00 Profit=$400 MR 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 MC Tickets Per Week Midterm #2 • • • • • 1 Hour in length 50 questions multiple choice Allocate 1 min. per question Feel free to leave questions until end Non-cumulative: Covers all TOPICS since first midterm