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Supply Curves and Marginal Revenue
How perfectly-competitive firms would set output.
If there are such firms.
The BIG ideas• Perfectly competitive firms produce until
MU=MC.• This is irrelevant because there are no perfectly
competitive firms. Monopolies produce where MC=Marginal Revenue.
• At MU=MC, firms lose money on some output because are not accounting for fixed inputs.
• Rational firms establish monopolies to raise prices, reducing production until MC=MR.
Orthodox bottom line: Supply Curves slope up and firms produce
where MU=MCThe punch line and the real story: It ain’t
necessarily so.
Monopoly P and Q
Perfect Competitive P and Q
Price
Output
Perfectly competitive firms ignore their effect on market prices and
think only of marginal costs
Why do marginal costs rise?
1. Because of diminishing marginal productivity.2. Because variable inputs have less and less
with which to work.3. Because the MPL declines with additional
workers.4. All of the above.
Perfectly competitive firms produce if Price > or = Marginal Cost
they think they profit if produce at a marginal cost less than the selling price.
At the PC Equilibrium:
1. Independence: market supply is the sum of each individual firm’s output. Add it up.
2. Price leads firms to produce what consumers want at that price.
3. More output comes with a higher price (moving up the MC or PC Supply Curve).
4. Less output at lower price if consumer demand declines (moving down the MC or PC Supply Curve).
Output increases with higher prices along the Supply Curve because at higher prices firms can
profit at higher MC
Firms profit on inframarginal output
Don’t produce!
In perfect competition, excessive profits attracts new entrants to drive down prices
and profits
Perfect Competition is Impossible
1. Perfect competitors ignore “sunk costs”2. They ignore the effect that increasing
production and sales has on the market price.Perfectly competitive firms go bankrupt.
Compare Marginal Costs with Average Total Costs
MC and Supply Curve:Perfect Competition
$0.00
$2.00
$4.00
$6.00
$8.00
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Quantity
Price
MC Demand Price Average total costs
Loss between ATC and
Price
To stay in business, firms must cover marginal costs and fixed costs
They cannot do this if they are perfectly competitive and sell at MC!
Our capitalist economy can only function if firms are monopolies.
Right again
How would you price airline tickets?
How much do you think it costs an airline to fly one more passenger from Boston to Paris?
1.Marginal cost (about $50)2.Average cost (about $330)3.$500 (about the price of a ticket)
A Boeing 747-400er
Perfectly competitive firms are myopic.And dumb.
They ignore the effect that increasing output has on the market price
Firms sell their increased output by lowering prices. Duh.
So the extra revenue they get from selling more must be discounted by the lower prices they now charge everyone else.
Algebra
MR= P – Q * Δ PMarginal revenue is the price you get for the
new sale minus the discount you give on all your earlier sales.
Isn’t math fun?
Why MR < PriceSales Demand TR Discount MR
1 $25.00 $25.00 $-00 $25.00 2 $23.75 $47.50 $(1.25) $22.50 3 $22.56 $67.69 $(2.38) $20.19 4 $21.43 $85.74 $(3.38) $18.05 5 $20.36 $101.81 $(4.29) $16.08 6 $19.34 $116.07 $(5.09) $14.25 7 $18.38 $128.64 $(5.80) $12.57 8 $17.46 $139.67 $(6.43) $11.03 9 $16.59 $149.27 $(6.98) $9.60
10 $15.76 $157.56 $(7.46) $8.29 11 $14.97 $164.65 $(7.88) $7.09 12 $14.22 $170.64 $(8.23) $5.99 13 $13.51 $175.62 $(8.53) $4.98 14 $12.83 $179.67 $(8.78) $4.05 15 $12.19 $182.88 $(8.98) $3.21 16 $11.58 $185.32 $(9.14) $2.44 17 $11.00 $187.05 $(9.27) $1.74 18 $10.45 $188.15 $(9.35) $1.10 19 $9.93 $188.68 $(9.41) $0.52 20 $9.43 $188.68 $(9.43) $-00
Selling more produces additional revenue equal to the price. But from this additional revenue must be deducted the discount given to previous (inframarginal) buyers. Marginal revenue is less than the price of output by this discount.
That is why Marginal Revenue is less than the selling price
If you sell on the demand curve, rather than the MR curve, you lose profit
Monopoly and Perfect Competition
$0.00
$2.00
$4.00
$6.00
$8.00
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Quantity
Price
MC Demand Average total costs MR
Perfect competitive loss
Monopoly profit
Smart businesses do not act like perfect competitors
1. They collude and form monopolies.2. They try to establish themselves as little
monopolies by differentiating their products.3. Brand names, frequent-buyer programs,
credit arrangements, technical restrictions are ways that firms lock you in as customers.
Only monopolies can survive
Sell on the demand curve and price at MC and you do not recoup your fixed costs.
You lose money.Unless you form a monopoly or cartel
to control prices.
Take-away points
• Perfectly competitive firms produce until MU=MC.
• Competitive firms lose money on some of their output because they have driven down prices.
• Competitive firms go bankrupt because they do not cover their fixed costs.
• Rational firms form monopolies to raise prices by reducing production until MC=MR.