Micro Final Exam Concepts WCC. Production and Cost

Similar documents
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

4. Market Structures. Learning Objectives Market Structures

Market Structure: Duopoly and Oligopoly

Economics Chapter 7 Market Structures. Perfect competition is a in which a large number of all produce.

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

A2 Micro Business Economics Diagrams

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

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

Market Structure: Oligopoly (Imperfect Competition)

Practice Questions Week 8 Day 1

Final Exam (Version 1) Answers

Figure: Computing Monopoly Profit

Chapter 16 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly


chapter: Oligopoly Krugman/Wells Economics 2009 Worth Publishers 1 of 35

Oligopoly. Models of Oligopoly Behavior No single general model of oligopoly behavior exists. Oligopoly. Interdependence.

Understanding Economics 2nd edition by Mark Lovewell and Khoa Nguyen

Imperfect Competition. Oligopoly. Types of Imperfectly Competitive Markets. Imperfect Competition. Markets With Only a Few Sellers

Oligopoly. Unit 4: Imperfect Competition. Unit 4: Imperfect Competition 4-4. Oligopolies FOUR MARKET MODELS

MPP 801 Monopoly Kevin Wainwright Study Questions

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

AP Microeconomics Review

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

Monopoly WHY MONOPOLIES ARISE

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

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

AGEC 105 Spring 2016 Homework Consider a monopolist that faces the demand curve given in the following table.

Oligopoly: Firms in Less Competitive Markets

Economics II: Micro Fall 2009 Exercise session 5. Market with a sole supplier is Monopolistic.

Pre-Test Chapter 23 ed17

Rutgers University Economics 102: Introductory Microeconomics Professor Altshuler Fall 2003

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

CHAPTER 6 MARKET STRUCTURE

Oligopoly and Game Theory

ECON101 STUDY GUIDE 7 CHAPTER 14

b. Cost of Any Action is measure in foregone opportunities c.,marginal costs and benefits in decision making

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 on the accompanying scantron.

Economics 203: Intermediate Microeconomics I Lab Exercise #11. Buy Building Lease F1 = 500 F1 = 750 Firm 2 F2 = 500 F2 = 400

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

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

Unit Theory of the Firm Unit Overview

Price competition with homogenous products: The Bertrand duopoly model [Simultaneous move price setting duopoly]

Chapter 7: Market Structures Section 3

chapter: Solution Oligopoly 1. The accompanying table presents market share data for the U.S. breakfast cereal market

Chapter 7 Monopoly, Oligopoly and Strategy

Jason Welker 2009 Zurich International School

Models of Imperfect Competition

Economics Instructor Miller Oligopoly Practice Problems

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

Econ Wizard User s Manual

Microeconomics. Lecture Outline. Claudia Vogel. Winter Term 2009/2010. Part III Market Structure and Competitive Strategy

13 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION AND OLIGOPOLY. Chapter. Key Concepts

1 of 14 11/5/2013 4:33 PM

Econ 101: Principles of Microeconomics

Oligopoly and Strategic Behavior

Aggressive Advertisement. Normal Advertisement Aggressive Advertisement. Normal Advertisement

Econ 101, section 3, F06 Schroeter Exam #4, Red. Choose the single best answer for each question.

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

INTRODUCTION OLIGOPOLY CHARACTERISTICS OF MARKET STRUCTURES DEGREES OF POWER DETERMINANTS OF MARKET POWER

Thus MR(Q) = P (Q) Q P (Q 1) (Q 1) < P (Q) Q P (Q) (Q 1) = P (Q), since P (Q 1) > P (Q).

Market Structure: Perfect Competition and Monopoly

Chapter 12 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly

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

WELCOME TO THE REAL WORLD OF MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION AND OLIGOPOLY

5. Suppose demand is perfectly elastic, and the supply of the good in question

UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT MICRO ECONOMICS - II

Experiment 8: Entry and Equilibrium Dynamics

Competition and Regulation. Lecture 2: Background on imperfect competition

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

12 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly

Extreme cases. In between cases

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

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

Oligopoly. Oligopoly is a market structure in which the number of sellers is small.

Managerial Economics & Business Strategy Chapter 9. Basic Oligopoly Models

Robert S. Pindyck. Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Chapter 7: Market Structure in Government and Nonprofit Industries. Soft Drinks. What is a Market? Do NFPs Compete? Some NFPs Compete Directly

Industry profit in an oligopoly (sum of all firms profits) < monopoly profit.

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

Write down the names of three companies: competition. major competitors.

OLIGOPOLY. Nature of Oligopoly. What Causes Oligopoly?

CHAPTER 10 PERFECT COMPETITION

Eco 340 Industrial Economics Market Structures: Cartels / Cooperative Oligopoly. Prof Dr. Murat Yulek

CHAPTER 11: MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION AND OLIGOPOLY

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

Chapter 6 Competitive Markets

Oligopoly and Strategic Pricing

LECTURE #15: MICROECONOMICS CHAPTER 17

ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS

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

When other firms see these potential profits they will enter the industry, causing a downward shift in the demand for a given firm s product.

Northern University Bangladesh

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

Profit maximization in different market structures

Mark Scheme (Results) Summer Pearson Edexcel GCE in Economics (6EC03) Paper 01

Chapter 7: Market Structures Section 1

Marginal cost. Average cost. Marginal revenue

Chapter 13 Oligopoly 1

Transcription:

Micro Final Exam WCC Think you are ready for the next exam? If so, you should be able to define the following terms, discuss the following concepts, and manipulate the following models without referring to the text or notes. Production and Cost Total Physical Product Marginal Physical Product Marginal Revenue Product Fixed Costs Variable Costs Sunk Costs Average Cost Marginal Cost Marginal Revenue Regions of the Total Physical Product Curve Relation of MPP to TPP Determining the best amount of a single input to use Derivation of the Total Cost Curve from the TPP Curve Shapes of, and relationship between, the AFC, AVC, ATC, and MC curves Effects of changes in fixed costs and variable costs on the position of these curves Derivation of the Total Profit Curve from TC and TR curves Determining the best level of output Effects of changes in fixed and variable costs on the profit maximizing level of output

Perfect Competition Economic profit Accounting profit Normal profit Productive efficiency Allocative efficiency Price taker Industry characteristics Shape of the short run PC market supply and demand curves Shape of the PC firm s demand curve Equivalency of the PC firm s demand, AR, and MR curves Determining the optimal level of output Determining and illustrating the PC firm s level of profit Shut down conditions Illustrate the PC firm s short run supply curve Difference between economic profit and accounting profit Time frame under which entry and exit can occur Effect of entry and exit on the market and firm supply and demand curves How changes in production costs due to entry and exit affect the shape of the market s long run supply curve Effects of taxes on the PC firm s short run and long run profits Types of advertising one is and is not likely to see under PC What it means to achieve productive and allocative efficiency

Monopoly Increasing returns to scale Natural monopoly Barriers to entry Deliberately erected barriers to entry Regulated monopoly Shape of a monopoly s demand and MR curves Ability of a monopolist to set price Determination of the best level of output Persistence of profit Examples of barriers to entry Benefits of advertising Effects of different taxes on a monopolists output and pricing decision Historical versus analytical cost curves Average cost pricing and marginal cost pricing

Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly Cartel Tacit collusion Game Theory Maximin Criterion Dominant Strategy Payoff Nash Equilibrium Grim Strategy Tit for tat strategy Determination of the monopolistically competitive firm s demand and MR curves Short run similarity to monopoly Long run similarity to perfect competition Desirability of advertising Role of strategic interaction in oligopolies Modeling cooperation Cartel formation and goals Legality of cartels and trusts Existence of tacit collusion Modeling lower than expected profits Understanding the Principal Agent problem Usefulness of Game Theory How timing can be important in games How communication can affect the outcome of games How repetition can enforce bargains

Antitrust Law and Regulation Price discrimination Tying contracts Interlocking directorates Exclusive dealing contracts Activities prohibited by the Sherman Antitrust Act Per se Doctrine Rule of Reason 3 types of mergers and which one the government is most likely to oppose Calculation and use of 4 firm concentration ratios How the Herfindahl Hirschmann Index improves upon the concentration ratio The logic of the SCP Model How Contestable Markets theory challenges the SCP model