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1 Firm Supply Molly W. Dahl Georgetown University Econ 101 – Spring 2009.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Firm Supply Molly W. Dahl Georgetown University Econ 101 – Spring 2009."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Firm Supply Molly W. Dahl Georgetown University Econ 101 – Spring 2009

2 2 Market Environments Perfect Competition  Many buyers & sellers  A firm in a perfectly competitive market knows it has no influence over the market price for its product. The firm is a market price-taker.

3 3 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision Each firm is a profit-maximizer and in a short-run. Q: How does each firm choose its output level?

4 4 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision Each firm is a profit-maximizer and in a short-run. Q: How does each firm choose its output level? A: By solving

5 5 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision For the interior case of y s * > 0, the first- order maximum profit condition is That is, So at a profit maximum with y s * > 0, the market price p equals the marginal cost of production at y = y s *.

6 6 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision For the interior case of y s * > 0, the second- order maximum profit condition is That is, So at a profit maximum with y s * > 0, the firm’s MC curve must be upward-sloping.

7 7 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision $/output unit y pepe ys*ys*y’ At y = y s *, p = MC and MC slopes upwards. y = y s * is profit-maximizing. At y = y’, p = MC and MC slopes downwards. y = y’ is profit-minimizing. MC s (y)

8 8 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision $/output unit y pepe y’ At y = y s *, p = MC and MC slopes upwards. y = y s * is profit-maximizing. So a profit-max. supply level can lie only on the upwards sloping part of the firm’s MC curve. MC s (y) ys*ys*

9 9 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision But not every point on the upward-sloping part of the firm’s MC curve represents a profit-maximum.

10 10 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision But not every point on the upward-sloping part of the firm’s MC curve represents a profit-maximum. The firm’s profit function is If the firm chooses y = 0 then its profit is

11 11 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision So the firm will choose an output level y > 0 only if

12 12 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision So the firm will choose an output level y > 0 only if I.e., only if Equivalently, only if

13 13 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision AVC s (y) AC s (y) MC s (y) $/output unit y

14 14 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision AVC s (y) AC s (y) MC s (y) $/output unit y

15 15 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision AVC s (y) AC s (y) MC s (y) p  AVC s (y) y s * > 0. $/output unit y

16 16 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision AVC s (y) AC s (y) MC s (y) p  AVC s (y) y s * = 0. $/output unit y p  AVC s (y) y s * > 0.

17 17 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision AVC s (y) AC s (y) MC s (y) p  AVC s (y) y s * = 0. The firm’s short-run supply curve $/output unit y p  AVC s (y) y s * > 0.

18 18 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision AVC s (y) AC s (y) MC s (y) The firm’s short-run supply curve Shutdown point $/output unit y

19 19 The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Decision Shut-down is not the same as exit. Shutting-down means producing no output (but the firm is still in the industry and suffers its fixed cost). Exiting means leaving the industry, which the firm can do only in the long-run.

20 20 In Class Producer’s Surplus Revisited The Firm’s Long-Run Supply Decision


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