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Chapter 10 Part 1

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Title: Chapter 10 Part 1


1
Chapter 10Part 1
  • The Firm Behavior under Perfect Competition
    Industry

2
Markets and the price system
  • What is a market in everyday language?
  • Supermarket, fish market, stock market etc
  • In economics, a market refers to a set of sellers
    and buyers whose activities affect the price at
    which a particular commodity is sold
  • The market for shoes
  • The market for furniture
  • NOT the shop Target that sells furniture

3
How do markets differ?
  • We differentiate among markets (based on)
  • How many firms a market includes
  • The market for restaurant meals includes
  • Applebees
  • Fridays
  • Zelo etc.
  • Difference of goods between different firms
  • Market for toothpaste BUT Crest vs. Colgate
  • How easy it is to enter
  • Can I open my own fast food restaurant?
  • Can I build my own power plant?

4
Different Markets
  • Different market types will affect how consumers
    and firms operate in these markets
  • Ex You will pay 1000 for a diamond (even though
    it is really worth 5c, BUT you will not pay
    1000 dollars for a hamburger
  • Ex In one market type, a Firm can get away with
    chargin you 1000 dollars for something worth
    5c, but in another market type if it tried to do
    that no one would buy

5
Market (or industry) Structure
  • In the next couple of chapters we examine how
    consumers and firms BEHAVE in different market
    types
  • These include
  • Perfect Competition
  • Many small firms selling identical product
  • Monopolistic Competition
  • Many small firms selling slightly different
    product
  • Oligopoly
  • Few large rival firms
  • Monopoly
  • A single firm dominating the market

6
Perfect Competition
  • A market is said to operate in Perfect
    Competition if
  • Many buyers (consumers) and sellers (firms) How
    many? So many that each person/firm is
    insignificant
  • B S are price takers everyone takes the
    market price as given
  • B S are so small that their decisions have no
    effect on price (No collusion etc)

7
Perfect Competition
  • Homogenous Products
  • All goods in the market are identical
  • Ex. Market for 24 carat gold or unenriched,
    unbleached organic white flour
  • Because of this no one firm has a large market
    share
  • Since all good are identical, consumers do not
    care which firm they buy from. If any market firm
    had a large market share, a competitor could
    grab the market share by decreasing their price
    by a trillionth of a cent (i.e. a small amount)

8
Perfect Competition
  • Free entry and exit
  • Firms can enter and leave industry/market without
    any barriers or costs
  • If firms are making profits, new can firms can
    enter. If firms are making losses they can exit.
  • No government or market barriers
  • No regulation
  • No natural barriers
  • etc.

9
Perfect Competition
  • Perfect information
  • Buyers and sellers are well informed
  • i.e. they know EVERYTHING about products and
    prices
  • If someone starts selling a product at a lower
    price, everyone knows about it IMMEDIATELY

10
Is there Perfect Competition?
  • Probably not!
  • BUT there are approximations
  • Some agricultural markets, with numerous
    suppliers and almost perfectly substitutable
    products
  • Stocks of individual companies
  • eBay auctions of similar products
  • So why do we care?
  • Under PC the market mech. works best
  • We start with something that works well then
    modify it

11
Perfect Competition
  • RECALL Distinction between market demand curve
    and the demand curve that a firm face
  • What would the demand curve that a firm faces in
    perfect competition industry look like?
  • A firm in PC can sell as much as it wants at the
    given market price

12
Demand Curve for a Firm under Perfect Competition
Why? Firm is so insignificantly small relative to
the market that it has absolutely no influence
over price! Think of a farmer selling his
stockpile of corn Same price whether he sells 1
truck or 10!
13
Perfect Competition and Profit Maximization
  • Recall MRMC principle
  • What would the MR curve look like for a firm in
    perfect competition?

14
Short-Run Equilibrium of the Perfectly
Competitive Firm
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