Perfect Competition Discussion Questions 1 or 2 pages for responding the questions in total. Action Items
1. Write a one to two page paper, addressing the following:
1. Describe in your own words the concept of market power.
2. Provide an example of a firm exercising its market power Referring to
your example above, answer the following questions:
o
o
What are the sources of the firm’s market power?
Can they be sustained over a short run / long run?
3. Answer the question below in your conclusion:
o
Why is it hard for a firm to maintain market power over a Long
Run?
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
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Prentice
Hall.
All rights
reserved.
Copyright
© 2012
Pearson
Prentice
Hall. All rights reserved.
6-1
CHAPTER
Perfect Competition
6
In the award-winning 2004 movie Sideways, the main character raved
about pinot noir wine. This review increased the demand for pinot noir
wine grown in the Willamette Valley in Oregon.
PREPARED BY
Brock Williams
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
APPLYING THE CONCEPTS
1
What is the break-even price?
The Break-Even Price for Switchgrass, a Feedstock for Biofuel
2
How do entry costs affect the number of firms in a market?
Wireless Women in Pakistan
3
How do producers respond to an increase in price?
Wolfram Miners Obey the Law of Supply
4
Why is the market supply curve positively sloped?
The Worldwide Supply of Copper
5
How do supply restrictions affect the boom-bust housing cycle?
Planning Controls and Housing Cycles in Britain
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-3
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
Perfect Competition
perfectly competitive market
A market with many sellers and
buyers of a homogeneous product
and no barriers to entry.
price taker
A buyer or seller that takes the
market price as given.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-4
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
Perfect Competition
Here are the five features of a perfectly competitive
market:
1 There are many sellers.
2 There are many buyers.
3 The product is homogeneous.
4 There are no barriers to market entry.
5 Both buyers and sellers are price takers.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-5
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
PREVIEW OF THE FOUR
MARKET STRUCTURES
6.1
firm-specific demand curve
A curve showing the relationship
between the price charged by a
specific firm and the quantity the firm
can sell.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-6
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.1
PREVIEW OF THE FOUR
MARKET STRUCTURES (contd)
? FIGURE 6.1
Monopoly versus Perfect Competition
In Panel A, the demand curve facing a monopolist is the market demand curve.
In Panel B, a perfectly competitive firm takes the market price as given, so the firm-specific
demand curve is horizontal. The firm can sell all it wants at the market price, but would sell
nothing if it charged a higher price.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-7
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.1
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
PREVIEW OF THE FOUR
MARKET STRUCTURES (contd)
6-8
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.2
THE FIRMS SHORT-RUN OUTPUT DECISION
The Total Approach: Computing Total Revenue
and Total Cost
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-9
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.2
THE FIRMS SHORT-RUN OUTPUT DECISION
(contd)
The Total Approach: Computing Total Revenue and Total
Cost
? FIGURE 6.2
Using the Total Approach
to Choose an Output
Level
Economic profit is shown by
the vertical distance between
the total-revenue curve and
the total-cost curve.
To maximize profit, the firm
chooses the quantity of
output that generates the
largest vertical difference
between the two curves.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-10
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
THE FIRMS SHORT-RUN OUTPUT DECISION
(contd)
6.2
The Marginal Approach
MARGINAL PRINCIPLE
Increase the level of an activity as long as its marginal benefit exceeds its
marginal cost. Choose the level at which the marginal benefit equals the
marginal cost.
marginal revenue
The change in total revenue from
selling one more unit of output.
marginal revenue = price
To maximize profit, produce the quantity where price = marginal cost
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-11
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.2
THE FIRMS SHORT-RUN OUTPUT DECISION
(contd)
The Marginal Approach
? FIGURE 6.3
The Marginal Approach to Picking an Output Level
A perfectly competitive firm
takes the market price as
given, so the marginal
benefit, or marginal revenue,
equals the price.
Using the marginal principle,
the typical firm will maximize
profit at point a, where the
$12 market price equals the
marginal cost.
Economic profit equals the
difference between the price
and the average cost ($4.125
= $12 $7.875) times the
quantity produced (eight
shirts per minute), or $33 per
minute.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-12
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
THE FIRMS SHORT-RUN OUTPUT DECISION
(contd)
6.2
Economic Profit and the Break-Even Price
economic profit = (price ? average cost) × quantity
produced
break-even price
The price at which economic profit is
zero; price equals average total cost.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-13
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.3
THE FIRMS SHUT-DOWN DECISION
Total Revenue, Variable Cost, and the Shut-Down Decision
operate if total revenue > variable cost
shut down if total revenue < variable cost
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-14
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.3
THE FIRMS SHUT-DOWN DECISION (contd)
Total Revenue, Variable Cost, and the Shut-Down Decision
? FIGURE 6.4
The Shut-Down Decision and
the Shut-Down Price
When the price is $4, marginal
revenue equals marginal cost
at four shirts (point a).
At this quantity, average cost is
$7.50, so the firm loses $3.50
on each shirt, for a total loss of
$14.
Total revenue is $16 and the
variable cost is only $13, so the
firm is better off operating at a
loss rather than shutting down
and losing its fixed cost of $17.
The shutdown price, shown by
the minimum point of the AVC
curve, is $3.00.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-15
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.3
THE FIRMS SHUT-DOWN DECISION (contd)
The Shut-Down Price
operate if price > average variable cost
shut down if price < average variable cost
shut-down price
The price at which the firm is
indifferent between operating and
shutting down; equal to the minimum
average variable cost.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-16
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.3
THE FIRMS SHUT-DOWN DECISION (contd)
Fixed Costs and Sunk Costs
sunk cost
A cost that a firm has already paid or
committed to pay, so it cannot be
recovered.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-17
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
APPLICATION
1
THE BREAK-EVEN PRICE FOR SWITCHGRASS, A
FEEDSTOCK FOR BIOFUEL
APPLYING THE CONCEPTS #1: What is the break-even
price?
To illustrate the notions of break-even price, lets look at these prices
for the typical farmer.
Comparing switchgrass to alfalfa:
The implicit rent on land to grow alfalfa $120 per acre.
If the switchgrass yield is 3 tons per acre, the opportunity cost is $40 per ton.
If the explicit cost of a ton of switchgrass is $36
The breakeven price is $76 = $36 + $40
To get some farmers to grow switchgrass instead of alfalfa the price must be at
least $56 per ton and to get the most fertile land switched the price must be
$95 per ton, or $76 on average.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-18
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.4
SHORT-RUN SUPPLY CURVES
The Firms Short-Run Supply Curve
short-run supply curve
A curve showing the relationship
between the market price of a
product and the quantity of output
supplied by a firm in the short run.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-19
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.4
SHORT-RUN SUPPLY CURVES (contd)
The Firms Short-Run Supply Curve
? FIGURE 6.5
Short-Run Supply Curves
In Panel A, the firms short-run supply curve is the part of the marginal-cost curve above the
shut-down price.
In Panel B, there are 100 firms in the market, so the market supply at a given price is 100 times
the quantity supplied by the typical firm. At a price of $7, each firm supplies 6 shirts per minute
(point b), so the market supply is 600 shirts per minute (point f)
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-20
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.4
SHORT-RUN SUPPLY CURVES (contd)
The Short-Run Market Supply Curve
short-run market supply curve
A curve showing the relationship
between market price and the
quantity supplied in the short run.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-21
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.4
SHORT-RUN SUPPLY CURVES (contd)
Market Equilibrium
? FIGURE 6.6
Market Equilibrium
In Panel A, the market demand curve intersects the short-run market supply curve at a price of $7.
In Panel B, given the market price of $7, the typical firm satisfies the marginal principle at point b,
producing six shirts per minute. The $7 price equals the average cost at the equilibrium quantity, so
economic profit is zero, and no other firms will enter the market.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-22
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
APPLICATION
2
WIRELESS WOMEN IN PAKISTAN
APPLYING THE CONCEPTS #2: How do entry costs affect
the number of firms in a market?
In Pakistan, phone service is now provided by thousands of wireless
women, entrepreneurs who invest $310 in wireless phone equipment
(transceiver, battery, charger), a signboard, a calculator, and a stopwatch.
They sell phone service to their neighbors, charging by the minute and
second.
On average, their net income is about $2 per day, about three times the
average per capita income in Pakistan.
The market for phone service has the features of a perfectly competitive market,
with easy entry, a standardized good, and a large enough number of suppliers
that each takes the market price as given.
In contrast, to enter the phone business in the United States, your initial
investment would be millions, or perhaps billions, of dollars, so the market for
phone service is not perfectly competitive.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-23
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
THE LONG-RUN SUPPLY CURVE FOR AN
INCREASING-COST INDUSTRY
6.5
long-run market supply curve
A curve showing the relationship
between the market price and
quantity supplied in the long run.
increasing-cost industry
An industry in which the average
cost of production increases as the
total output of the industry increases;
the long-run supply curve is
positively sloped.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-24
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.5
THE LONG-RUN SUPPLY CURVE FOR AN
INCREASING-COST INDUSTRY (contd)
The average cost of production increases as the total output increases,
for two reasons:
Increasing input price. As an industry grows, it competes with
other industries for limited amounts of various inputs, and this
competition drives up the prices of these inputs.
Less productive inputs. A small industry will use only the most
productive inputs, but as the industry grows, firms may be forced to
use less productive inputs.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-25
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.5
THE LONG-RUN SUPPLY CURVE FOR AN
INCREASING-COST INDUSTRY (contd)
Production Cost and Industry Size
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-26
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.5
THE LONG-RUN SUPPLY CURVE FOR AN
INCREASING-COST INDUSTRY (contd)
Drawing the Long-Run Market Supply Curve
? FIGURE 6.7
Long-Run Market Supply Curve
The long-run market supply curve
shows the relationship between the
price and quantity supplied in the long
run, when firms can enter or leave the
industry.
At each point on the supply curve, the
market price equals the long-run
average cost of production. Because
this is an increasing-cost industry, the
long-run market supply curve is
positively sloped.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-27
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.5
THE LONG-RUN SUPPLY CURVE FOR AN
INCREASING-COST INDUSTRY (contd)
Examples of Increasing-Cost Industries:
Sugar and Apartments
The sugar industry is an example of an increasing-cost industry. As the price
increases, sugar production becomes profitable in areas where production
costs are higher, and as these areas enter the world market, the quantity of
sugar supplied increases.
The market for apartments is another example of an increasing-cost industry
with a positively sloped supply curve. Most communities use zoning laws to
restrict the amount of land available for apartments. As the industry expands by
building more apartments, firms compete fiercely for the small amount of land
zoned for apartments. Housing firms bid up the price of land, increasing the
cost of producing apartments. Producers can cover these higher production
costs only by charging higher rents to tenants. In other words, the supply curve
for apartments is positively sloped because land prices increase with the total
output of the industry, pulling up average cost and necessitating a higher price
for firms to make zero economic profit.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-28
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
APPLICATION
3
WOLFRAM MINERS OBEY THE LAW OF SUPPLY
APPLYING THE CONCEPTS #3: How do producers
respond to an increase in price?
Consider the market for wolfram during World War II. Wolfram is an ore of
tungsten, an alloy required to make heat-resistant steel for armor plate and
armor-piercing shells. During World War II, the United States and its
European allies bought up all the wolfram produced in Spain, thus denying
the Axis powersGermany and Italythis vital military input. However, the
wolfram-buying program was very costly to the Allied powers for two reasons:
The Allied powers had to outbid the Axis powers for the wolfram, so the price
increased from $1,144 per ton to $20,000 per ton.
Spanish firms responded to the higher prices by supplying more wolfram.
Workers poured into the Galatia area in Spain, where they used simple tools
to gather wolfram from the widely scattered outcroppings of ore. This market
entry increased the quantity of wolfram supplied tenfold. Because wolfram
miners obeyed the law of supply, the Allied powers were forced to buy a huge
amount of wolfram, much more than they had expected.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-29
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
APPLICATION
4
THE WORLDWIDE SUPPLY OF COPPER
APPLYING THE CONCEPTS #4: Why is the market supply
curve positively sloped?
The mining industry is another example of an increasing-cost industry. When the
price of copper is relatively low, only low-cost mines operate. As the price of
copper increases, mines with progressively higher extraction costs become
profitable and are brought on line.
Between 2001 and 2006, the price of copper increased from $1,300 to $7,000 per
ton, and the industry moved upward along the long-run supply curve as high-cost
mines started or resumed production.
A recent geological survey of Afghanistan found a significant deposit of copper at
Aynak, just south of Kabul beneath an old al-Qaeda training camp.
With a copper price of $7,000, it would be profitable to spend the $1 billion
necessary to develop the site.
But if the price of copper were to fall back to the level observed in 2001, the
Aynak mine would be a losing proposition.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-30
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.6
SHORT-RUN AND LONG-RUN EFFECTS
OF CHANGES IN DEMAND
The Short-Run Response to an Increase in Demand
? FIGURE 6.8
Short-Run Effects of an Increase in Demand
An increase in demand for shirts increases the market price to $12, causing the typical firm to
produce eight shirts instead of six.
Price exceeds the average total cost at the eight-shirt quantity, so economic profit is positive. Firms
will enter the profitable market.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-31
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.6
SHORT-RUN AND LONG-RUN EFFECTS
OF CHANGES IN DEMAND (contd)
The Long-Run Response to an Increase in Demand
? FIGURE 6.9
Short-Run and Long-Run Effects
of an Increase in Demand
The short-run supply curve is steeper
than the long-run supply curve because
of diminishing returns in the short run.
In the short run, an increase in demand
increases the price from $7 (point a) to
$12 (point b).
In the long run, firms can enter the
industry and build more production
facilities, so the price eventually drops to
$10 (point c).
The large upward jump in price after the
increase in demand is followed by a
downward slide to the new long-run
equilibrium price.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-32
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
APPLICATION
5
PLANNING CONTROLS AND HOUSING CYCLES IN BRITAIN
APPLYING THE CONCEPTS #5: How do supply restrictions
affect the boom-bust housing cycle?
Restrictions on residential development make housing suppliers less responsive to
changes in demand. As a result, the housing market is more prone to cycles of rising
and falling prices.
In a market with development controls, an increase in demand causes a large increase
in price because the supply side of the market is hobbled in its response. The stricter the
controls, the steeper the supply curve, and the larger the short-run increase in price.
If the restrictions are eventually relaxed to accommodate higher demand, the supply
side of the market responds, leading to an increase in quantity and a drop in prices.
In Britain, development restrictions are more severe than they are in the United States,
and this partly explains why Britain has more frequent housing booms and busts.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-33
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
LONG-RUN SUPPLY FOR A
CONSTANT-COST INDUSTRY
6.7
constant-cost industry
An industry in which the average cost
of production is constant; the long-run
supply curve is horizontal.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-34
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.7
LONG-RUN SUPPLY FOR A
CONSTANT-COST INDUSTRY (contd)
Long-Run Supply Curve for a Constant-Cost Industry
? FIGURE 6.10
Long-Run Supply Curve for
a Constant-Cost Industry
In a constant-cost industry, input
prices do not change as the
industry grows.
Therefore, the average
production cost is constant and
the long-run supply curve is
horizontal.
For the candle industry, the cost
per candle is constant at $0.05,
so the supply curve is horizontal
at $0.05 per candle.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
6-35
CHAPTER 6
Perfect Competition
6.7
LONG-RUN SUPPLY FOR A
CONSTANT-COST INDUSTRY (contd)
Hurricane Andrew and the Price of Ice
? FIGURE 6.11
Hurricane Andrew and the
Price of Ice
A hurricane increases the demand for
ice, shifting the demand curve to the
right.
In the short run, the supply curve is
relatively steep, so the price rises by a
large amountfrom $1 to $5.
In the long run, firms enter the industry,
pulling the price back...
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