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Chapter 7 ©2010 Worth Publishers Perfect Competition.
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Transcript of Chapter 7 ©2010 Worth Publishers Perfect Competition.
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Chapter 7
©2010 Worth Publishers
Perfect Competition
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1. A perfectly competitive market and its characteristics
2. A Price-taking producer and its profit-maximizing quantity of output
3. How to assess profitability
Chapter Objectives
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Perfect Competition and Price-takers
A price-taking producer is one whose actions have no effect on the market price of the good it sells.
A price-taking consumer is one whose actions have no effect on the market price of the good he or she buys.
A perfectly competitive market is a market in which all participants are price-takers.
A perfectly competitive industry is an industry in which all producers are price-takers.
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Two Necessary Conditions for Perfect Competition
1) For an industry to be perfectly competitive, it must contain many producers, none of whom have a large market share.
A producer’s market share is the fraction of the total industry output accounted for by that producer’s output.
2) An industry can be perfectly competitive only if consumers regard the products of all producers as equivalent.
A good is a standardized product, also known as a commodity, when consumers regard the products of different producers as the same good.
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Free Entry and Exit
Free entry and exit into and from an industry is when new producers can easily enter or leave that industry.
Free entry and exit ensure:that the number of producers in an industry can adjust to changing market conditions, and,
that producers in an industry cannot artificially keep other firms out.
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Production and Profits
6
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Quick Review
Total Revenue = Price * Quantity
Profit = Total Revenue – Total Cost
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Using Marginal Analysis to Choose the Profit-Maximizing Quantity of Output
Marginal revenue is the change in total revenue generated by an additional unit of output.
MR = ∆TR/∆Q
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The Optimal Output Rule
Optimal output rule says that profit is maximized by producing the quantity of output at which the marginal cost of the last unit produced is equal to its marginal revenue.
MR = MCProfit maximization is also loss
minimization
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Short-Run Costs for Jennifer and Jason’s Farm
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Marginal Analysis Leads to Profit-Maximizing Quantity of Output
The optimal output rule says profit is max is when MR = MC
The marginal revenue curve shows how marginal revenue varies as output varies.
Note: when firm is a price taker, MR curve is a flat (horizontal) line which is perfectly elastic
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The Price-Taking Firm’s Profit-Maximizing Quantity of Output
The profit-maximizing point is where MC crosses MR curve (horizontal line at the market price): at an output of 5 bushels of tomatoes (the output quantity at point E).76543210
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Price, cost of bushel
Quantity of tomatoes (bushels)
MC
MR = PE
Profit-maximizing quantity
Optimal point
Market price
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Costs
Economic profit: firm’s revenue minus opportunity costs of resources
Explicit costs: cost that involve actual outlay of money
Implicit costs: do not require an outlay of money; measured by value in dollar terms, of benefits forgone
Accounting profit: firm’s revenue minus explicit cost (usually larger than economic profit)
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When Is Production Profitable?
If TR > TC, the firm is profitable.
If TR = TC, the firm breaks even.
If TR < TC, the firm incurs a loss.
Profitability depends on whether market price is more or less than minimum ATC
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Short-Run Average Costs
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Costs and Production in the Short Run
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18
14
MC
ATC
MR = PC
Break even price
Minimum-cost output
Price, cost of bushel
Quantity of tomatoes (bushels)
Minimum average total cost
At point C (the minimum average total cost), the market price is $14 and output is 4 bushels of tomatoes (the minimum-cost output).
This is where MC cuts the ATC curve at its minimum. Minimum average total cost is equal to the firm’s break-even price.
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Profitability and the Market Price
The farm is profitable because price exceeds minimum average total cost, the break-even price, $14. The farm’s optimal output choice is (E) output of 5 bushels. The average total cost of producing bushels is (Z on the ATC curve) $14.40
The vertical distance between E and Z:farm’s per unit profit, $18.00 − $14.40 = $3.60Total profit:5 × $3.60 = $18.00
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MC
Profit ATCMR= P
C Z
E
Market Price = $18
1414.40
$18
Price, cost of bushel
Quantity of tomatoes (bushels)
Minimum average total cost
Break even price
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Profitability and the Market Price
The farm is unprofitable because the price falls below the minimum average total cost, $14.The farm’s optimal output choice is (A) output of 3 bushels. The average total cost of producing bushels is (Y on the ATC curve) $14.67
The vertical distance between A and Y:farm’s per unit loss, $14.67 − $10.00 = $4.67Total profit:3 × $4.67 = approx. $14.00
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MC
Loss
ATC
MR = PC
A
Y
Market Price = $10
14
10
$14.67
Price, cost of bushel
Quantity of tomatoes (bushels)
Minimum average total cost
Break even price
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Profit, Break-Even or Loss
The break-even price of a price-taking firm is the market price at which it earns zero profits.
Whenever market price exceeds minimum average total cost, the producer is profitable.
P > min ATC ProfitWhenever the market price equals minimum
average total cost, the producer breaks even.P = min ATC Break Even
Whenever market price is less than minimum average total cost, the producer is unprofitable.
P < min ATC Loss
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Why would firms enter an industry when they will do little more than break even? Wouldn’t people prefer to go into other businesses that yield a better profit?
The answer is that here, as always, when we calculate cost, we mean opportunity cost—the cost that includes the return a business owner could get by using his or her resources elsewhere.
And so the profit that we calculate is economic profit; if the market price is above the break-even level, potential business owners can earn more in this industry than they could elsewhere.
Economic Profit, Again
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Profit – another way
Profit = TR – TC TR = P*Q TC = ATC*Q
Profit = (TR/Q – TC/Q)*QOr
Profit = (P – ATC)*Q
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The Short-Run Individual Supply Curve
The short-run individual supply curve shows how an individual producer’s optimal output quantity depends on the market price, taking fixed cost as given.
A firm will cease production in the short run if the market price falls below the shut-down price, which is equal to minimum average variable cost.
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MC
ATC
AVCC
B
A
E
Minimum average variable cost
Short-run individual supply curve
Shut-down price
Price, cost of bushel
Quantity of tomatoes (bushels)
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Short Run Production Decision
Fixed costs are irrelevant because they cannot be changed in the short run.
Shut-down price: when price is equal to minimum average variable cost
Sunk cost: already been incurred and is non-recoverable. Not included in production decisions
Operate if P > AVC - incur loss in short run
Shut down when P < AVC
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Summary of the Competitive Firm’s Profitability and Production Conditions