Lab 12: Perfectly Competitive Market



Similar documents
Chapter. Perfect Competition CHAPTER IN PERSPECTIVE

Practice Questions Week 8 Day 1

Chapter 8. Competitive Firms and Markets

Pricing and Output Decisions: i Perfect. Managerial Economics: Economic Tools for Today s Decision Makers, 4/e By Paul Keat and Philip Young

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

We will study the extreme case of perfect competition, where firms are price takers.

Chapter 6 Competitive Markets

Pre-Test Chapter 21 ed17

CHAPTER 9: PURE COMPETITION

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Managerial Economics & Business Strategy Chapter 8. Managing in Competitive, Monopolistic, and Monopolistically Competitive Markets

D) Marginal revenue is the rate at which total revenue changes with respect to changes in output.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question on the accompanying scantron.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

c. Given your answer in part (b), what do you anticipate will happen in this market in the long-run?

Economics 10: Problem Set 3 (With Answers)

11 PERFECT COMPETITION. Chapter. Competition

CHAPTER 12 MARKETS WITH MARKET POWER Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 2 nd Edition

Learning Objectives. Chapter 6. Market Structures. Market Structures (cont.) The Two Extremes: Perfect Competition and Pure Monopoly

EXAM TWO REVIEW: A. Explicit Cost vs. Implicit Cost and Accounting Costs vs. Economic Costs:

Microeconomics Topic 7: Contrast market outcomes under monopoly and competition.

Pure Competition urely competitive markets are used as the benchmark to evaluate market

Market Structure: Perfect Competition and Monopoly

Profit Maximization. 2. product homogeneity

ECON 103, ANSWERS TO HOME WORK ASSIGNMENTS

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Understanding Economics 2nd edition by Mark Lovewell and Khoa Nguyen

CHAPTER 11 PRICE AND OUTPUT IN MONOPOLY, MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION, AND PERFECT COMPETITION

N. Gregory Mankiw Principles of Economics. Chapter 14. FIRMS IN COMPETITIVE MARKETS

PART A: For each worker, determine that worker's marginal product of labor.

Learning Objectives. After reading Chapter 11 and working the problems for Chapter 11 in the textbook and in this Workbook, you should be able to:

Principles of Economics: Micro: Exam #2: Chapters 1-10 Page 1 of 9

chapter Perfect Competition and the >> Supply Curve Section 3: The Industry Supply Curve

Chapter 8 Production Technology and Costs 8.1 Economic Costs and Economic Profit

ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS

AP Microeconomics 2003 Scoring Guidelines

Chapter 05 Perfect Competition, Monopoly, and Economic

Econ 201 Final Exam. Douglas, Fall 2007 Version A Special Codes PLEDGE: I have neither given nor received unauthorized help on this exam.

Monopoly WHY MONOPOLIES ARISE

Practice Questions Week 6 Day 1

CHAPTER 18 MARKETS WITH MARKET POWER Principles of Economics in Context (Goodwin et al.)

Price Theory Lecture 6: Market Structure Perfect Competition

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MPP 801 Monopoly Kevin Wainwright Study Questions

At the end of Chapter 18, you should be able to answer the following:

Chapter 9: Perfect Competition

Experiment 8: Entry and Equilibrium Dynamics

A. a change in demand. B. a change in quantity demanded. C. a change in quantity supplied. D. unit elasticity. E. a change in average variable cost.

How To Calculate Profit Maximization In A Competitive Dairy Firm

Equilibrium of a firm under perfect competition in the short-run. A firm is under equilibrium at that point where it maximizes its profits.

Figure: Computing Monopoly Profit

Chapter 14 Monopoly Monopoly and How It Arises

Chapter 7: The Costs of Production QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW

12 PERFECT COMPETITION. Chapter. Answers to the Review Quizzes. Page 275. Page 279

CEVAPLAR. Solution: a. Given the competitive nature of the industry, Conigan should equate P to MC.

Chapter 14 Monopoly Monopoly and How It Arises

Profit maximization in different market structures

Chapter 22 The Cost of Production Extra Multiple Choice Questions for Review

Employment and Pricing of Inputs

1. Supply and demand are the most important concepts in economics.

Practice Multiple Choice Questions Answers are bolded. Explanations to come soon!!

Final Exam (Version 1) Answers

MODULE 62: MONOPOLY & PUBLIC POLICY

CHAPTER 8 PROFIT MAXIMIZATION AND COMPETITIVE SUPPLY

Microeconomics and mathematics (with answers) 5 Cost, revenue and profit

Name Eco200: Practice Test 2 Covering Chapters 10 through 15

COST THEORY. I What costs matter? A Opportunity Costs

Market Supply in the Short Run

Rutgers University Economics 102: Introductory Microeconomics Professor Altshuler Fall 2003

Econ 202 Exam 3 Practice Problems

Chapter 7 Monopoly, Oligopoly and Strategy

Break-even analysis. On page 256 of It s the Business textbook, the authors refer to an alternative approach to drawing a break-even chart.

Chapter 12. The Costs of Produc4on

Midterm Exam #1 - Answers

Unit Theory of the Firm Unit Overview

Chapter 15: Monopoly WHY MONOPOLIES ARISE HOW MONOPOLIES MAKE PRODUCTION AND PRICING DECISIONS

Econ 101: Principles of Microeconomics

Market for cream: P 1 P 2 D 1 D 2 Q 2 Q 1. Individual firm: W Market for labor: W, S MRP w 1 w 2 D 1 D 1 D 2 D 2

Chapter 27: Taxation. 27.1: Introduction. 27.2: The Two Prices with a Tax. 27.2: The Pre-Tax Position

or, put slightly differently, the profit maximizing condition is for marginal revenue to equal marginal cost:

Name Eco200: Practice Test 1 Covering Chapters 10 through 15

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question on the accompanying scantron.

CHAPTER 10 MARKET POWER: MONOPOLY AND MONOPSONY

An increase in the number of students attending college. shifts to the left. An increase in the wage rate of refinery workers.

A2 Micro Business Economics Diagrams

UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT MICRO ECONOMICS - II

Chapter 7: Market Structures Section 1

Variable Cost. Marginal Cost. Average Variable Cost 0 $50 $50 $ $150 A B C D E F 2 G H I $120 J K L 3 M N O P Q $120 R

Revenue Structure, Objectives of a Firm and. Break-Even Analysis.

Theory of Perfectly Competitive Markets

Oligopoly: How do firms behave when there are only a few competitors? These firms produce all or most of their industry s output.

Chapter 04 Firm Production, Cost, and Revenue

Demand, Supply and Elasticity

4. Market Structures. Learning Objectives Market Structures

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Perfect Competition. Chapter CHAPTER OUTLINE. What s New in this Edition? CHAPTER ROADMAP

Marginal cost. Average cost. Marginal revenue

Monopolistic Competition

The Cost of Production

Transcription:

Lab 12: Perfectly Competitive Market 1. Perfectly competitive market 1) three conditions that make a market perfectly competitive: a. many buyers and sellers, all of whom are small relative to market b. products sold by all the firms are identical c. no barriers for new firms to enter the market 2) Prices in perfectly competitive markets are determined by the interaction of demand and supply. Once the equilibrium price is determined, all the buyers and sellers have to accept it if they want to buy or sell in perfectly competitive markets. i.e. All the firms and consumers are price takers. They cannot affect the market price. See graph below. 3) Note: You need to differentiate the demand for the whole market from the demand for one seller. Demand for the whole market is downward sloping curve shown in the left graph. Demand for an individual seller is a horizontal line at the equilibrium price determined by the market. 2. Profit maximization in the short run 1) For a firm in a perfectly competitive market, price is equal to both average revenue and marginal revenue. P=MR=AR (only true in perfectly competitive market) 2) Condition for profit maximization is MR=MC (true in any type of market) 3) Combine these two results together: for a profit maximizing firm in a perfectly competitive market, it will choose the output where price is equal to marginal cost. P=MC 1

3. Show the profit or loss on the graph How to calculate the profit: Total Profit=TR-TC =P*Q-ATC*Q = (P-ATC)*Q Profit per unit of output=total profit/q =P-ATC Look at the graph above, firm should choose to produce output Q to maximize profit since Q is the output level at which point P=MC. The shaded area is total profit for this profit-maximizing firm. The vertical distance between point A and B = (P-ATC), which is profit per unit of output. The profits of firm have three possibilities: 1) P> ATC, firm makes a profit, this case is shown in the above graph. 2) P< ATC, firm experience losses, see right graph below, total loss is the shaded area. 3) P=ATC, firm breaks even (profit=0), see left graph, point A is called the break-even point (the minimum point of ATC curve). 2

4. Shut down point in the short run When a firm suffers from losses in the short run (P<ATC), it has two choices: 1) Continue to run the firm: Loss1= (P-ATC)*Q 2) Stop production by shutting down temporarily. Under this choice, firm still need to pay its fixed cost since fixed cost is kind of sunk cost in the short run. Therefore, Loss2= -FC= -AFC*Q So, whether the firm who suffering losses chooses to shut down in the short run depends on the magnitudes of the two losses: 1) If P> AVC, Loss1>Loss2, firm should continue to run the business although it experiences losses in the short run. 2) If P< AVC, Loss1<Loss 2, firm should choose to shut down in the short run. 3) If P=AVC, Loss1=Loss 2, firm should be indifferent between still running the firm or shut it down. Note: To determine whether a firm makes profit, you compare P and ATC To determine whether a firm should shut down its business (you already know that P<ATC), you compare P and AVC 5. The supply curve of a firm in the short run 1) Supply is 0 when actual price is smaller than shut down price (price of the minimum point of AVC) 2) Supply curve is equal to MC curve when actual price is greater than shut down price 3) When actual price is equal to shut down price, firm is indifferent providing any output between zero and Q 3

6. Firm s choices in the long run a. Economic profit leads to entry of new firms: b. Economic Losses lead to exit of existing firms: See figure 11-9 in textbook Page396 c. Due to entry and exit, the long-run equilibrium market price is at the level equal to the minimum point of firm s ATC curve. See graph below. All the firms in a perfectly competitive market earn economic profit equal to zero. (Since economic profit is the profit after accounting for the implicit cost of a firm, zero economic profit means positive accounting profit. This is why firms earning zero economic profit still exist in the market.) d. Long run supply curve a horizontal line at the price determined by the minimum point of ATC curve. e. Shutdown point and break-even point are the same in the long run: the minimum point of ATC curve (compare to the shutdown point in the short run: the minimum point of AVC curve) 4

Exercise: 1. (4.4 Page 407) The graph represents the situation of a perfectly competitive firm. Indicate on the graph the areas that represent the following: a. Total cost=atc*q b. Total revenue=p*q c. Variable cost=avc*q d. Profit or loss=(p-atc)*q Briefly explain whether the firm will continue to produce in the short run. Answer: The firm should continue to produce in the short run. That s because that when firm produce the output level where MR=MC (output level Q), price is greater than average variable cost. The loss from continuing the business is lower than the loss from totally shutting down. 2. (3.6 page 406) According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, during the fourth quarter of 2003, the profits of British Airways rose to 83 million, from 13 million one year earlier. At the same time, the average amount the airline makes on each paying passenger fell 0.8%. If profit per passenger fell, how could total profits rise? Illustrate your answer with a graph. Be sure to indicate profit per passenger and total profit on the graph. Answer: Total profit can rise, even if profit per passenger falls, if the total number of passengers rises. The graph is drawn so that price stays the same, while the firm increases the scale of its operations, as shown by the move from ATC1 to ATC2. The average total cost per passenger is now slightly higher, shrinking profit per passenger-but the quantity has risen significantly, so total profits have risen, from (P-ATC1)*Q1 to (P-ATC2)*Q2. 5

3. Suppose that in the short run, a profit-maximizing firm in a perfectly competitive market produces a quantity such that ATC>P=MC>AVC. We may conclude that: A. The firm will earn a normal profit, and investors will receive the normal rate of return B. Total revenue (TR) is less than total variable cost (VC) and the firm must shut down in the short run C. If the condition persists, some firms will leave the market in the long run D. If the condition persists, new firms will be attracted to this market in the long run. Answer: C Let s look at the choice one by one. Choice A is wrong since when P<ATC, the firm is losing money Choice B is wrong because in this question TR is greater than VC. We can see this by multiply Q on both sides of P>AVC. Choice C is right and Choice D is wrong because when P<ATC, the firm is losing money, which will cause some firms in the industry to leave the market in the long run. 6