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Perfect Competition

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Title: Perfect Competition


1
Perfect Competition
  • Sometimes referred to as Pure Competition or just
    The Competitive Firm

2
Market Structure
  • The particular environment of a firm, the
    characteristics of which influence the firms
    pricing and output decisions.

3
Background on Markets
  • When economists analyze the production decisions
    of a firm, they take into account the structure
    of the market in which the firm is operating.
  • Four Different Market Structures
  • Perfect Competition
  • Monopoly
  • Monopolistic Competition
  • Oligopoly

4
The Theory of Perfect Competition I
  • A theory of market structure based on four
    assumptions
  • There are many sellers and many buyers, none of
    which is large in relation to total sales or
    purchases.
  • Each firm produces and sells a homogeneous
    product.
  • Buyers and sellers have all relevant information
    with respect to prices, product quality, sources
    of supply, and so on.
  • There is easy entry into and exit from the
    industry.

5
Perfect Competitive Market
  • Why teach about a non-existent form of
    competition?
  • Questions to answer
  • What are profits?
  • What are the unique characteristics of
    competitive firms
  • How much output will a competitive firm produce

6
A Perfectly Competitive Firm is a Price Taker
  • A seller that does not have the ability to
    control the price of the product it sells it
    takes the price determined in the market.

7
Market Model Price/Output
  • Market economy varies from one seller to many
    sellers
  • None is typical.
  • Each unique and attempting to operate with their
    self-interest in mind.
  • Look at the Models for the 4 market categories
    How does each determine the price to charge and
    the output to produce?

8
Market structure characteristics
  • All four market structures have four
    distinguishing characteristics
  • The number and size of the firms in the market.
  • The ease with which firms may enter and exit the
    market.
  • The degree to which firms products are
    differentiated.
  • The amount of information available to both
    buyers and sellers regarding prices, product
    characteristics and production techniques.

9
Take a personal look?
  • How many of you owned a computer 10 years ago?
  • How many own a compact disc player today?
  • How many have discarded the VCR in favor of a
    DVD?
  • Do you own an Ipod?
  • Do you own an IPhone?
  • Do you own a graphing calculator?
  • Did your parents have a graphing calculator
  • How did your parents type project papers for
    economics class?
  • Competition has brought the above changes about.

10
Price Taker Discussion
  • When there are many firms, all producing and
    selling the same product using the same inputs
    and technology, competition forces each firm to
    charge the same market price for its good.
  • Because each firm sells the same homogeneous
    product, no single firm can increase the price
    that it charges above the price charged by other
    firms in the market (without losing business.)
  • No single firm can affect the market price by
    changing the quantity of output it supplies-
    because many firms- each firm is small in size.

11
Demand CurveIndividual firm/industry
  • The perfect competitor faces a horizontal or
    perfectly elastic demand curve.
  • The demand curve is identical to the Marginal
    Revenue Curve (because the firm can sell as much
    as it wants to sell at market price.) It is not
    necessary to lower the price to sell more.
  • The demand curve for the entire industry slopes
    downward (this is a result of aggregate entries
    and exits into the market.)

12
Price Takers Demand Curve
  • The market forces of supply and demand determine
    price.
  • Price takers have no control over the price
    that they may charge in the market. If such
    a firm was to offer their good/service at a
    price above that established by the market,
    then consumers would simply buy elsewhere.
  • Thus, the demand for the product of the firm is
    perfectly elastic. Only at the market price
    will there be any demand.

13
Demand Curve
  • Market Demand Curves vs. Firm Demand Curves
  • While the actions of a single competitive firm
    are negligible, the unified actions of many such
    firms are not.
  • The individual firms equilibrium quantity of
    output will be completely determined by the
    amount of output the individual firm chooses to
    supply

14
SHORT RUN
  • In the short-run individual firm may make profit
    or loss
  • In long run will break even
  • You can always tell if the firm is making a
    profit or loss by looking at the DEMAND CURVE AND
    THE ATC CURVE
  • If the demand curve is ABOVE the ATC curve at any
    point the firm will make a profit.
  • If the demand curve is always BELOW the ATC curve
    the firm will lose money.

15
Total Revenue
16
Most profitable point for any firm
  • Profit maximization is where
  • MC MR
  • Efficiency
  • A firm operates at peak efficiency when it
    produces its product at the lowest possible cost
    That would be at the MINIMUM POINT OF ITS ATC
    CURVE the break even point.

17
Profit-Maximization Rule
  • Profit is maximized by producing the quantity of
    output at which MR MC.
  • For Perfect Competition, profit is maximized when
    P MR MC
  • This condition is unique for perfect
    competition and does not hold for other market
    structures.

18
Realization
  • Marginal Cost
  • A firms goal is not to maximize revenues, but to
    maximize profits.
  • Marginal revenue is compared to marginal costs to
    determine the best level of output.
  • What an additional unit of output brings in is
    its marginal revenue (MR).

19
Profit Maximization
p MC
MRB
Profit-maximizing rate of output
MCB
20
Profit Maximization when the Firm
is a Price Taker
  • In the short run, the price taker will expand
    output until marginal revenue (price) is just
    equal to marginal cost.

Price
  • This will maximize the firms profits
    (rectangle BACP).

B
  • When P gt MC then the firm can make more on
    the next unit sold than it costs to increase
    output for that unit. In order for the
    firm to maximize its profits it increases
    output until MC P.
  • When P lt MC then the firm made less on the
    last unit sold than it cost for that unit. In
    order for the firm to maximize its
    profits it decreases output until MC P.

Output/ Time
q
0
21
Marginal Revenue / Marginal Cost Approach
  • We can show the relationship between the
    TR/TC and the MR/MC approach.
  • Below, low levels of output deliver marginal
    revenue to the firm greater than the
    marginal cost of increased output.

----
----
- 25.00
5
4.80
- 24.80
  • After some point, though, additional units
    cost more than their marginal revenue.

5
3.95
- 23.75
.
  • Profit is maximized where P MR MC.

.
.
.
.
  • Both the TR/TC and the MR/MC method yield the
    same profit maximizing output, q15

1.50
- 8.00
5
- 4.25
5
1.25
Price and CostPer Unit
- .25
5
1.00
9
5
1.25
3.50
5
6.75
1.75
7
5
9.25
2.50
MR
5
10.75
3.50
5
11.00
5
4.75
5
10.00
6.00
3
5
7.25
7.75
4.50
5
8.25
1
5
0.00
9.50
- 8.00
5
13.00
Output Level
- 20.00
17.00
5
10
8
4
2
6
12
14
16
18
20
22
22
Operating
  • In the graph to the right, the firm operates
    at an output level where p MC, but here ATC
    gt MC resulting in a loss for the firm.

Price
with Short-Run Losses
  • The magnitude of the firms short-run losses
    is equal to the size of the of the rectangle
    BACP1
  • A firm experiencing losses but covering its
    average variable costs will operate in the
    short-run.

B
  • A firm will shutdown in the short-run
    whenever price falls below average variable
    cost (P2).
  • A firm will shutdown in the long-run whenever
    price falls below average total cost.

Output/ Time
q
0
23
Long Run
  • In the long run there is time for firms to enter
    or leave the industry. This factor ensures that
    the firm will make ZERO profits in the long run.

24
Long Run
  • In the LR, no firm will accept losses.
  • It will simply close up shop and go out of
    business.
  • But also remember one firm leaving the industry
    WILL NOT affect market price.

25
LR Continued
  • If one firm is losing money, presumably others
    are too.
  • When enough firms go out of business, industry
    supply declines which pushes price up
  • This price rise is reflected in a new demand
    curve for the firm.
  • P D1 D2 S1

S2
Q
26
ATC
MC
60
MR (D)
50
27
  • For the perfect competitor in the LR, the most
    profitable output is at the minimum point of its
    ATC curve.
  • The firm is forced to operate at peak efficiency
    and that is why it operates at the minimum of its
    ATC curve.. Not anything to do with virtue-------
    just competition.

28
Remember Firm Demand Curve is Different from
Industrys Demand Curve
29
Point of Fact
  • For virtually every industry---- a firm will be
    able to lower its ATC if it can expand up to a
    certain point.
  • If it expands beyond that point ATC will rise.
  • Two concepts Increasing and Decreasing costs.
  • The third alternative is constant costs.

30
Economies of Scale
31
Decreasing Cost Industry
  • Decreasing cost industry can lower ATCs by
    increasing output thus taking advantage of
    economies of scale
  • examples such as discounts from buying or selling
    large quantities, declining average fixed cost as
    output expands, and lower costs resulting from
    specialization

32
Increasing Cost Industry
  • Increasing Cost Industries diseconomies of
    scale overwhelm economies of scale.
  • These diseconomies drive costs up, pushing firms
    into the rising segment of their ATC curves.
    (examples would be managerial inefficiencies,
    cost of maintaining a huge bureaucracy,
    difficulties of communication among various
    branches, also diminishing returns.)

33
Factor Costs
  • Factor costs mean wages, rent and interest- are
    far the most important determinants of whether
    costs are falling, constant or increasing.
  • Usually factor costs will eventually rise which
    makes every industry an increasing costs
    industry. Example as more and more land is used
    by an expanding industry, rent will be bid up
  • Time influences supply Whether industry is in SR
    or LR all can adjust in LR if desire to do so.

34
Profit- what kind is it???
  • Pure Profit -an amount above that necessary to
    keep the owner in the industry is not considered
    part of total cost
  • Pure profit is the residual after all costs
    (including normal profit) have been met
  • Pure profit will attract other firms into the
    market
  • Normal Profit will not induce firms into the
    market- nor are they low enough to force others
    to leave.. Breaking even..

35
Basic Info
  • As long as MR is greater than MC the firm will
    find an advantage in increasing its production.
  • Rule is The most profitable point for any firm
    is the point at which MC MR. The firm can
    improve its profit position by increasing its
    output up to the point where MC crosses MR.

36
Shutdown point for a firm
  • A firm compares total revenue with total cost to
    see what its profit or loss is.
  • Remember there are fixed and variable costs.
  • Fixed costs have to be paid whether operating or
    not.
  • Suppose a firms total cost is 300,000 at a
    certain level of output. 200,000 made up of
    variable costs,such as labor and raw materials
    and 100,000made up of fixed costs such as
    interest payments, taxes, and rent.

37
Shutdown Continued
  • If the firms total revenue is 240,000 it is
    clearly taking a loss. The difference between TR
    and TC in this case is 60,000.
  • Notice that the total revenue of 240,000 pays
    all of the firms variable costs (200,000) and
    also pays 40,000 of its fixed cost. If the firm
    were to shut down on the other hand, its loss
    would total 100,000- the amount of the fixed
    cost.

38
  • There may be instances where the firm can pay all
    fixed and part of variable. In those cases, it
    is possible the firm will opt for that.
  • BUT. For the most part, and for you to
    remember if firm can pay variable and part of
    fixed, they will continue to operate.

39
Shutdown Continued
  • As long as a firm can cover ALL of its variable
    cost by remaining in operation, it will do so.
  • Its shutdown point will be where TR no
    longer covers TVC.
  • Shutdown when MR falls below the firms minimum
    AVC. When a firm shuts down, it does not
    necessarily leave the industry. Shutdown is a SR
    responseand is based on fixed costs of
    established plant and variable costs of operating
    it.

40
Profit Maximization and Loss Minimization for the
Perfectly Competitive Firm Three Cases I
  • In Case 1, TR TC and the firm earns profits.
  • It continues to produce in the short run.

41
Profit Maximization and Loss Minimization for the
Perfectly Competitive Firm Three Cases II
  • In Case 2, TR lt TC and the firm takes a loss.
  • It shuts down in the short run because it
    minimizes its losses by doing so it is better to
    lose 400 in fixed costs than to take a loss of
    450.

42
Profit Maximization and Loss Minimization for the
Perfectly Competitive Firm Three Cases III
  • In Case 3, TR lt TC and the firm takes a loss.
  • It continues to produce in the short run because
    it minimizes its losses by doing so it is better
    to lose 80 by producing than to lose 400 in
    fixed costs by not producing.

43
What Should a Perfectly Competitive Firm Do in
the Short Run?
  • The firm should produce in the short run as long
    as price (P) is above average variable cost
    (AVC).
  • It should shut down in the short run if price is
    below average variable cost.

44
The Perfectly Competitive FirmsShort-Run Supply
Curve
  • To see a tutorial on this topic click the
    graph to the right.

45
The Perfectly Competitive FirmsShort-Run Supply
Curve
  • The short-run supply curve is that portion of
    the firms marginal cost curve that lies above
    the average variable cost curve.

46
Long-run Equilibrium
  • The two conditions necessary for long-run
    equilibrium in a price-taker market are
    depicted here.
  • First, the quantity supplied and the quantity
    demanded must be equal in the market, as
    shown below at P1 with output Q1.
  • Second, the firms in the industry must earn zero
    economic profit (that is, the normal market
    rate of return) at the established market
    price (P1 below).

P1
q1
Q1
47
The Lure of Profits
  • In competitive markets, economic profits attract
    new entrants.
  • Low entry barriers permit new firms to enter
    competitive markets.
  • The entry of new firms shifts the market supply
    curve to the right.
  • As long as economic profits are available in
    short-run competitive equilibrium, new entrants
    will continue to be attracted.
  • p MC
  • Short-run competitive equilibrium

48
A Shift of Market SupplyAny short-run
equilibrium will not last.
  • As supply increases, price drops, to the minimum
    of ATC.
  • Once at minimum of ATC, there are no longer
    economic profits to attract firms to enter.
  • In long-run equilibrium, entry and exit cease,
    and zero economic profit (i.e., normal profit)
    prevails.
  • Long-run equilibrium
  • p MC minimum ATC

49
Short- vs. Long-Run Equilibrium
50
Long-Run Rules for Entry and Exit
51
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52
Further Supply Shifts
  • With strong competition, often the only way for a
    firm to improve profitability is to reduce costs.
  • Cost reductions can be accomplished through
    technological improvements. This might increase
    productivity.
  • Technological improvements are illustrated by a
    downward shift of the ATC and MC curves.

53
Technology improvements noted below
54
Allocative Efficiency
  • The market mechanism works best in competitive
    markets.
  • Market mechanism - The market mechanism is the
    use of market prices and sales to signal desired
    output.
  • Allocative efficiency means that we are producing
    the right output mix.
  • The price signal the consumer gets in a
    competitive market is an accurate reflection of
    opportunity cost.

55
Production Efficiency
  • Production efficiency means that we are producing
    at minimum average total cost.
  • Efficiency (production) Maximum output of a
    good from the resources used to produce it.
  • When competitive pressure on prices is carried to
    the limit, the products in question are also
    produced at the least possible cost.
  • Society is getting the most it can from its
    available (scarce) resources. This market model
    is the best buy for consumers.

56
Reality of Attaining a Profit
  • The sequence of events common to a competitive
    market situation includes the following.
  • High prices and profits signal consumers demand
    for more output.
  • Economic profit attracts new suppliers.
  • The market supply shifts to the right
  • Prices slide down the market demand curve.
  • A new equilibrium is reached with increased
    quantities being produced and sold and the
    economic profit approaching zero.
  • Producers experience great pressure to keep ahead
    of the profit squeeze by reducing costs.

57
Profits Are The Bottom Line
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