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Perfect Competition Many (small) firms, producing a homogeneous (identical) product, none of which having an impact on the price; each firm's product is non-distinguishable from other firms' product. b. Many buyers none of whom having any effect on the price. c. No barriers to entry and exit: in the long run firms can shut down and leave the industry or new firms can come into the industry freely. d. No interference in the market process: No price control or restrictions on production e. All firms have equal and complete access to the available inputs (input markets) and production technology; all firms have the same production and cost functions. f. All sellers and buyers have perfect information about the market conditions. g. Making above-normal profits by existing firms will result in new entries into the industry. Firms that have losses shut down and leave the industry in the long run.

Perfect Competition

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Perfect Competition. Many (small) firms, producing a homogeneous (identical) product, none of which having an impact on the price; each firm's product is non-distinguishable from other firms' product. b. Many buyers none of whom having any effect on the price. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Perfect Competition

Perfect Competition• Many (small) firms, producing a homogeneous (identical) product, none of

which having an impact on the price; each firm's product is non-distinguishable from other firms' product.

• b. Many buyers none of whom having any effect on the price.

• c. No barriers to entry and exit: in the long run firms can shut down and leave the industry or new firms can come into the industry freely.

• d. No interference in the market process: No price control or restrictions on production

• e. All firms have equal and complete access to the available inputs (input markets) and production technology; all firms have the same production and cost functions.

• f. All sellers and buyers have perfect information about the market conditions.

• g. Making above-normal profits by existing firms will result in new entries into the industry. Firms that have losses shut down and leave the industry in the long run.

Page 2: Perfect Competition

How is the market price Determined?

• Market Supply:

The (horizontal) sum of individual supply curves

• Market Demand:

The (horizontal) sum of individual demand curves

Page 3: Perfect Competition

P P

0 0Q Q

Dm

Smo

po

p1

Sm1

Do

D1

S

qoq1

Market A typical firm

Page 4: Perfect Competition

Perfect Competition:Profit Maximization in the Short Run

• An individual firm takes the market price as given; the demand each individual firm faces is horizontal.

• MR = P: Demand

• Set the price equal to MC

• In the short- run the firm could have an economic profit

Page 5: Perfect Competition

0Q

$

SMC

SATC

AVC

Pm

ab

c

Qe

Df, MR

Profit Maximization in the Short Run

Page 6: Perfect Competition

Adjustments in the Long Run• If economic profits are present new firms

will come into the industry

• The Market price will fall

• The profit shrinks

• Input prices may go up

• Firms try to stay profitable by taking advantage of economies of scale

• Firms adopt an optimal size

• Economic profits tend toward zero

Page 7: Perfect Competition

0Q

$

SMC

SATC

AVC

Pmc Df , MR

Smo

Qm

Pm1

Pm2

Pm3

Pm4

Sm1Sm2

Sm3Sm4

Q4 Q3 Q2 Q1 Qo

$

MARKETo

Dm

Page 8: Perfect Competition

LATC

DPm

Qe

Qo

SAC1

SAC2

SAC3

SAC4

A competitive firm’s long-run equilibrium

Page 9: Perfect Competition

Long-Run Equilibrium in a Perfectly Competitive Market

o o Q

$P $

Dm

SmLATC

SATC1

SATC2

SATC3

Df

Qe

Pe

MC2

Market A typical firm

Page 10: Perfect Competition

Long-Run Equilibrium under Perfect Competition

• Many “optimal-size” firms, each producing at the minimum long run average cost and charging the market price where:

P = MR= MC = SATC = LATC

• Allocative efficiency: MC = P

• Productive efficiency: MC= SATC = LATC

• Zero economic profit (normal profit) : P = ATC

Page 11: Perfect Competition

Pure Monopoly• A single firm producing a homogenous or

differentiated (unique) good and facing the market demand.

• No substitutes

• No new entries allowed

• The monopoly is a price maker

• P>MR

• Possibility of a sustained economic profit

Page 12: Perfect Competition

What circumstances lead to the formation of a monopoly?

• Extensive economies of scale: natural monopolies

• Exclusive patent rights

• Copy rights to intellectual properties

• Government franchises

• Exclusive access to a essential resource (input)

• Cartels

A monopoly is a profit maximizer too!

Page 13: Perfect Competition

$

Q

Q

$

DmMR0

0

TR

a-2b

-b

Demand Faced by A Monopoly

Page 14: Perfect Competition

SMC

SATC

D

MR

P

Qe

Q

$

k

mn

o

c

Qc

Page 15: Perfect Competition

The Dynamics of a Monopolistic Market

• As a profit maximizer a monopoly may try to take advantage of economies of scale

• A monopoly tends to try to protect its monopolistic position

• A monopoly may take advantage of technological advances

• A monopoly may face changes in demand

• A monopoly may try to promote its product to maintain demand

Page 16: Perfect Competition

SMC

SATC

D

MR

P

Qe

Q

$

n

o

LATCk

m

L-R Positive Economic Profit

ATC>MC, P>MR, P>MC, P>ATC

Page 17: Perfect Competition

Monopolies and Profit Maximization • A monopoly faces the industry demand curve

• To maximize profit: MR = MC

P = 80 - .0008Q ; MR = 80 - .0016Q

TC = 10,000 + .0092Q2 ; MC = .0184 Q

Set MR = MC Q = 4000; P = 76.8

Profit = 307,200 – 147,200 – 10,000 = 150,000

• Profit = (P- ATC). Q

Page 18: Perfect Competition

Things Change• Demand may go down

• Cost could increase

• In an attempt to keep the potential competitors out, the monopolist may lower its price to near its average cost

• Rent seeking: an attempt to maintain its monopolistic position by influencing the political processes-e.g., zoning laws

• Closer substitutes may emerge

Page 19: Perfect Competition

SMC

SATC

D

MR

P

Qe

Q

$

o

LATC

L-R Zero Economic Profit

ATC>MC, P>MR, P>MC, P = ATC

Page 20: Perfect Competition

The Case of Natural Monopolies• A natural monopoly emerges out of competition

among firms in an industry with extensive economies of scale; the downward-sloping segment of the LATC curve extends to or beyond the market capacity (or market demand).

• Smaller firms are gradually driven out by the larger (more efficient) firms.

• The surviving firm would become a (natural) monopoly.

• If unchecked, a natural monopoly behaves like a monopoly; it under-produces and overcharges.

Page 21: Perfect Competition

SAC1

SAC2

SAC3

o Q

$

D

Natural Monopolies

LAC

Q1 Q2 Q3

Page 22: Perfect Competition

SAC

o Q

$

D

Natural Monopolies Monopoly Pricing

LATC

MR

SMC

LMC

Pm

QcQm

AC

p

Page 23: Perfect Competition

MC

Qo

Pc

Pm

Qm Qc

A Comparison

DMR

$

Page 24: Perfect Competition

Price Discrimination

• Segmenting the market into separate classifications or regions

• Assuming that each class of consumers have different demand, a monopoly can charge different prices in each market segment

To price-discriminate• The firm must identify consumer groups/classes with different

downward-sloping demand curves• The firm must be able to prevent consumers of one class from

reselling its product to the consumers of another class; no intermarket redistribution of the product is allowed

Page 25: Perfect Competition

$

D

MRD`

MR

MC, ATV

oQ Q

P`

P

Q Q

Price Discrimination

Page 26: Perfect Competition

Monopsony vs. Monopoly

MRPL:DL

MRL

MCL

SLWu

o Eu Ec

Wc

Wm

Em

Page 27: Perfect Competition

Cartels

Q

Industry

ΣMC

Dm

MR

P,C P,C

P

o o

Firm A Firm B

oQBQA

MCA

MCB

ATCA

ATCB

P,C