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1 Perfect Competition Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Perfect Competition Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Perfect Competition Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

2 2 What will I learn in this chapter? This chapter discusses how competitive markets determine prices, output, and profits

3 3 What economic puzzles will I learn to solve? Why is the demand curve horizontal for a firm in a perfectly competitive market? Why would a firm stay in business while losing money? In the short run, can alligator farms earn an economic profit?

4 4 Who was Adam Smith? The father of modern economics who wrote The Wealth of Nations, published in 1776

5 5 What did Adam Smith say about competitive forces? They are like an “invisible hand” that leads people who pursue their own interests to serve the interests of society

6 6 What is market structure? A classification system for the key traits of a market, including the number of firms, the similarity of the products they sell, and the ease of entry and exit

7 7 What is perfect competition? 1. many small firms 2. homogeneous product 3. very easy entry and exit 4. price taker

8 8 What is meant by a large number of firms? A large number of sellers condition is met when each firm is so small relative to the total market that no single firm can influence the market price

9 9 What does homogeneous mean? Goods that cannot be distinguished from one another; for example, one potato cannot be distinguished from another potato

10 10 What conclusion can we make? If a product is homogeneous, buyers are indifferent as to which seller’s product they buy

11 11 What does easy entry mean? Perfect competition requires that resources be completely mobile to freely enter a market

12 12 What is a price taker? A seller that has no control over the price of the product

13 13 What determines price? Supply and Demand

14 14 5101520 25 30354045 D S Market Supply and Demand P Q $80 $60 $40 $20 $100 $120 $130 $140

15 15 What determines the individual firm’s demand curve? A horizontal line at the market price

16 16 $80 $60 $40 $20 5 101520 $100 $120 $130 $140 2530354045 D Individual firm demand

17 17 Why is this horizontal line the firm’s demand curve? If the firm charges more than this price, it will not sell anything, and it has no incentive to charge less than this price

18 18 Why does the firm have no incentive to charge less than the market price? It can sell everything it brings to market at the market price

19 19 What does the perfectly competitive firm control? The only thing it controls is how many units it produces

20 20 How many units should this firm produce? The number of units whereby it will maximize its profits, or at least minimize its losses

21 21 What are the two methods to determine how many units to produce? TR and TC MR and MC

22 22 Using the total revenue - total cost method, where should a firm produce? Where the distance between TR and TC is the greatest

23 23 $400 $100 124 $300 $200 5 $500 3 Quantity of Output TR Maximize Profit TC P Q Loss

24 24 $100 -$50 124 $50 0 5 $150 3 TR Maximize Profit Output P Q Profit Loss

25 25 What is marginal revenue? MR = TR / 1 output

26 26 What is marginal cost? MC = TC / 1 output

27 27 Using the marginal revenue and marginal cost method, where should a firm produce? MR = MC

28 28 Why should a firm continue to produce as long as MR > MC? As long as MR is > than MC, money is being made on that last unit

29 29 Why will a firm not produce that unit where MR < MC? At the unit of output where MR < MC, money is being lost on that last unit

30 30 Why does P = AR in perfect competition? Each additional unit sold is adding the market price to TR and TR divided by P = AR

31 31 Why does P = MR in perfect competition? Because each unit sells for the same price, therefore each unit sold adds the price to total revenue

32 32 What conclusion can we make? Price equals marginal revenue equals average revenue equals the firm’s short run demand curve

33 33 Why is the firm’s demand curve horizontal at the market price? Because the firm can sell all it produces at the market price

34 34 $40 $30 $20 $10 $50 $60 $70 $80 12345 6 789 ATC AVC MC P = MR = AR Profit MR=MC Price & Cost per unit D

35 35 $40 $30 $20 $10 $50 $60 $70 ATC AVC MC 1234 5 6789 P=MR=AR Loss Price & Cost per unit MR=MC P Q D

36 36 $40 $30 $20 $10 123 4 $50 $60 $70 56789 ATC AVC MC P=MR=AR Shutdown Point MR=MC P Q Loss Price & Cost per unit D

37 37 Price (MR) is below minimum average variable cost Firm will shut down

38 38 What is the perfectly competitive firm’s short- run supply curve? The firm’s marginal cost curve above the minimum point on its average variable cost curve

39 39 $40 $30 $20 $10 1 234 $50 $60 $70 56789 ATC AVC MC MR 3 Firm’s Short-Run Supply Curve P Q MR 2 MR 1

40 40 What is the industry’s supply curve? The summation of the individual firm’s MC curves that lie above their minimum AVC points

41 41 $100 25 $80 $60 $40 $20 5101520 $120 $130 30354045 S =  MC Industry Equilibrium P Q D

42 42 What is a normal profit? The minimum profit necessary to keep a firm in operation

43 43 In the long-run, what happens when economic profits are made? When firms make more than a normal profit, firms enter the industry, as supply increases, a downward pressure is put on prices

44 44 In the long-run, what happens when losses are made? When firms make less than a normal profit, firms leave the industry, as supply decreases, an upward pressure is put on prices

45 45 In the long-run, where is equilibrium? At the market price that enables firms to make a normal profit

46 46 What exists at long-run perfectly competitive equilibrium? P = MR = SRMC = SRATC = LRAC

47 47 $40 $30 $20 $10 1 234 $50 $60 $70 5 6 789 SATC LRAC SRMC MR Equilibrium Long-Run Competitive Equilibrium P Q

48 48 END


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