Pure Competition in the Long Run

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Part 6 Perfect Competition
Advertisements

Prices and Output decisions for
Perfect Competition. Chapter Outline ©2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All Rights Reserved. 2 The Goal Of Profit Maximization The Four Conditions For Perfect.
Chapter 23: Competitive Markets Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 13e.
Firm Behavior and the Organization of Industry
Ch. 11: Perfect Competition.  Explain how price and output are determined in perfect competition  Explain why firms sometimes shut down temporarily and.
Ch. 11: Perfect Competition.  Explain how price and output are determined in perfect competition  Explain why firms sometimes shut down temporarily and.
Chapter 10: Perfect competition
Ch. 12: Perfect Competition.
8 Perfect Competition  What is a perfectly competitive market?  What is marginal revenue? How is it related to total and average revenue?  How does.
Profit Maximization and the Decision to Supply
Quick Quiz On 2 separate diagrams For a firm facing a downward sloping demand curve: Illustrate normal profit Illustrate abnormal profit.
Ch. 12: Perfect Competition.  Selection of price and output  Shut down decision in short run.  Entry and exit behavior.  Predicting the effects of.
Perfect Competition 11-1 Chapter 11 Main Assumption Economists assume that the goal of firms is to maximize economic profit. Max P*Q – TC = Π = TR – TC.
Types of Market Structure
AP Economics Mr. Bernstein Module 60: Long-Run Outcomes in Perfect Competition November 12, 2014.
Chapter: 13 >> Krugman/Wells Economics ©2009  Worth Publishers Perfect Competition and The Supply Curve.
Econ 1900 Laura Lamb Perfect competition 2. Monopolistic competition 3. Oligopoly 4. Pure Monopoly 2.
Chapter 10-Perfect Competition McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2015 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Perfect Competition Mikroekonomi 730g  The Four Conditions For Perfect Competition  The Short-run Condition For Profit Maximization  The Short-run.
Perfect Competition *MADE BY RACHEL STAND* :). I. Perfect Competition: A Model A. Basic Definitions 1. Perfect Competition: a model of the market based.
And Unit 3 – Theory of the FirmPart Many buyers and sellers 2. All the products are homogeneous. 3. All buyers & sellers are price takers. 4. There.
Perfect Competition CHAPTER 10 © 2016 CENGAGE LEARNING. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. MAY NOT BE COPIED, SCANNED, OR DUPLICATED, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, EXCEPT FOR.
Price Takers and the Competitive Process
Perfect Competition Chapter 9 ECO 2023 Fall 2007.
Chapter 14 Firms in Competitive Markets. What is a Competitive Market? Characteristics: – Many buyers & sellers – Goods offered are largely the same –
Chapter 7: Pure Competition. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright  2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. What is a Pure Competition? Pure.
Chapter 11 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 7: Pure Competition Copyright © 2007 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Perfect Competition 1. Market Structure Continuum Pure Competition Pure Monopoly Monopolistic Competition Oligopoly FOUR MARKET MODELS Characteristics.
1 Chapter 8 Practice Quiz Perfect Competition A perfectly competitive market is not characterized by a. many small firms. b. a great variety of.
Long Run A planning stage of Production Everything is variable and nothing fixed— therefore only 1 LRATC curve and no AVC.
Perfect Competition in the Long-Run 1 You are a wheat farmer. You learn that there is a more profit in making corn. What do you do in the long run? Copyright.
8.1 Costs and Output Decisions in the Long Run In this chapter we finish our discussion of how profit- maximizing firms decide how much to supply in the.
Perfect Competition.
Chapter 14 Questions and Answers.
Economics 2010 Lecture 12 Competition (II). Competition  Output, Price, and Profit in the Short Run  Output, Price, and Profit in the Long Run  Changing.
Lecture 7 Chapter 20: Perfect Competition 1Naveen Abedin.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 7: Pure Competition Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Krugman/Wells Microeconomics in Modules and Economics in Modules Third Edition Module 27 Long-Run Outcomes in Perfect Competition.
Ch. 12: Perfect Competition.
Chapter 14 Firms in Competitive Markets
Firm Behavior Under Perfect Competition
Chapter 10-Perfect Competition
SLIDES PREPARED BY JUDITH SKUCE, GEORGIAN COLLEGE
Industry Supply Curve Ap micro 10/16.
Pure Competition in the Short-Run
Lesson 3-5 Short Run Equilibrium in PC
Perfect Competition in the Long-run
The Meaning of Competition
#1 MC MR=D=AR= P ATC AVC Q $ Should the firm produce?
Perfect Competition (Part 2)
14 Firms in Competitive Markets P R I N C I P L E S O F
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
23 Pure Competition.
Perfect Competition.
Perfect Competition part II
© 2007 Thomson South-Western
© 2007 Thomson South-Western
Ch. 12: Perfect Competition.
Perfect Competition part II
Managerial Decisions in Competitive Markets
8/9b - ARE BUSINESSES EFFICIENT? Pure Competition in the Long Run
Long-Run Analysis In the long run, a firm may adapt all of its inputs to fit market conditions profit-maximization for a price-taking firm implies that.
PURE CompetITion.
Perfect Competition Long Run Overheads.
Chapter 10: Perfect competition
Pure Competition Chapter 9.
Perfect Competition © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
10 C H A P T E R Pure Competition.
Presentation transcript:

Pure Competition in the Long Run Sam, Greg, Rohit, Matt, Dylan

In the long run... Pure competition describes an market where no firms are large enough to have the market power to set the price of a homogeneous product Firms can expand/contract, enter/exit The firm is the price taker Identical costs: all firms in the industry have the same costs Example: Agricultural products

Short Run vs. Long Run short run: a firm can either earn profits or incur losses long run: when firms are earning profits, new firms will be attracted to enter the industry When firms suffer losses, they may be forced to shut down and leave the industry Entry/exit occurs until the industry has reached a long run equillibrium. Firms then generate normal profits

Entry into the Market An increase in demand raises price and profit. This encourages other firms to enter into the market.

Entry continued When firms enter the market, demand increases and supply increases. Supply increases, prices fall

Exit from the Market Higher industry output from new entrants drives price and profit back down. Normal profit P=MR=MC=ATC Encourages exit from the market

Exit continued When firms exit the market, Supply decreases, demand decreases Supply decreases, prices fall

Equilibrium Entry or exit will continue until the market price generates normal profits for the industry With firms earning normal profit, they will have no incentive to enter or exit the industry, which then constitutes an equilibrium in the industry Entry and exit improves resource allocation: Firms that exit the industry leave their resources to be used in other industries who will use the resources more efficiently

Allocative Efficiency Definition: occurs when there is an optimal distribution of goods and services, taking into account consumer’s preferences A market will be allocatively efficient if it is producing the right goods for the right people at the right price. A more precise definition of allocative efficiency is at an output level where the price equals the Marginal Cost (MC) of production This is because the price that consumer’s are willing to pay is equivalent to the marginal utility that they get. Therefore the optimal distribution is achieved when the marginal utility of the good equals the marginal cost. Essentially, allocative efficiency will occur when marginal benefit = marginal cost

The primary force encouraging the entry of new firms into a purely competitive industry is: Normal profits earned by firms already in the industry Economic profits earned by firms already in the industry Government subsidies for start up firms A desire to provide goods for the betterment of society 2. Suppose a firm in a purely competitive market discovers that the price of its product is above its minimum AVC point but everywhere below ATC. Given this, the firm: Minimizes losses by producing at the minimum point of its AVC curve Maximizes profits by producing where MR=ATC Should close down immediately Should continue producing in the short run but leave the industry in the long run if the situation persists 3. Which of the following is true concerning purely competitive industries There will be economic losses in the long run because of cut throat competition Economic profits will persist in the long run if consumer demand is strong and stable In the short run, firms may incurs economic losses or earn economic profits but in the long run, they earn normal profit There are economic profits in the long run but not in the short run 4. Long run competitive equilibrium: Is realized only in constant cost industries Will never change once it is realized Is not economically efficient Results in zero economic profits 5. A constant cost industry is one in which: Resource prices fall as output is increased Resource prices rise as output is increased Resource prices remain unchanged as output is increased Small and large levels of output entail the same total cost