51-1 Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
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Transcript of Competition Chapter 6 Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights...
![Page 1: Competition Chapter 6 Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.](https://reader036.fdocuments.net/reader036/viewer/2022081503/56649ef65503460f94c09e1a/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Competition
Chapter 6Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin
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6-2
Market Structure
• The number and relative size of firms in an industry.
• Most real-world firms fall somewhere along a spectrum that stretches from one extreme (powerless) to another (powerful).
LO-1
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6-3
Five common types of market structure:
• Perfect Competition
• Monopolistic Competition
• Oligopoly
• Duopoly
• Monopoly
Market Structure
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6-4
Figure 6.1
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6-5
Competitive Firm
• A perfectly competitive firm is one without market power.– It is not able to alter the market price of
the good it produces.– It is a price taker.– It competes with many other firms selling
homogenous products.
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6-6
Competitive Market
• A competitive market is one in which no buyer or seller has market power.
• No single producer or consumer has any control over the price or quantity of the product.
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6-7
Monopoly
• A monopoly firm is one that produces the entire market supply of a particular good or service.– It is a price setter, not a price taker. – It has no direct competitors.– It has complete market power; it can alter
the market price of a good or service.
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6-8
Imperfect Competition
• Other forms of imperfect competition lie between the extremes of monopoly and perfect competition.– Duopoly: only two firms supply a product.– Oligopoly: a few large firms supply all or most of
a particular product.– Monopolistic competition: many firms supply
essentially the same product but each enjoys significant brand loyalty.
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6-9
Perfect Competition
• Perfectly competitive firms are pretty much faceless.
• They have no brand image, no real market recognition.
• A perfectly competitive firm is one whose output is so small in relation to market volume that its output decisions have no perceptible impact on price.
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6-10
No Market Power
• The output of a lone perfectly competitive firm is so small relative to market supply that it has no significant effect on the total quantity or price in the market.
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6-11
Price Takers
• A perfectly competitive firm is a price taker.
• An individual firm’s output decisions do not affect the market price.
• An individual firm must take the market price and do the best it can within these constraints.
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6-12
Market Demand versus Firm Demand
• We must distinguish between the market demand curve and the demand curve confronting a particular firm.– The market demand curve for a product is
always downward-sloping.– The demand curve facing a perfectly
competitive firm is horizontal.
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6-13
Figure 6.2
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6-14
The Firm’s Production Decision
• Choosing a rate of output is a firm’s production decision:– It is the selection of the short-term rate of
output (with existing plant and equipment).
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6-15
Output and Revenues
• Total revenue is the price of a product multiplied by the quantity sold in a given time period:
Total revenue = price x quantity
LO-2
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6-16
Revenues versus Profits
• Profit is the difference between total revenue and total cost.
• Maximizing output or revenue is not the way to maximize profits.
• Total profits depend on how both revenue and cost increase as output expands.
• A business is profitable only within a certain range of output. LO-2
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6-17
Profit Maximization and Price
• To maximize profit, the firm should produce an additional unit of output only if it brings in revenue that is greater than the cost of producing it.
• Since competitive firms are price takers, they must take whatever price the market has determined for their products.
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6-18
Figure 6.5
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6-19
Profit-Maximizing Rate of Output
• Never produce anything that costs more than it brings in – it boils down to comparing price and marginal cost.
• A competitive firm wants to expand the rate of production whenever price exceeds marginal cost.
• Short-run profits are maximized at the rate of output where price equals marginal cost.
LO-3
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6-20
Short-Run Decision Rules for a Competitive Firm
o Price = MCMaintain output rate (Profits maximized)
o Price < MCDecrease output rate
o Price > MCIncrease output rate
LO-3
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6-21
Total Profit
• Total profit can be computed in one of two ways:
Total profit = total revenue – total cost
OR
Total profit = average profit (profit per
unit) x quantity soldLO-3
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6-22
• Profit per unit equals price minus average total cost:
Profit per unit = p – ATC
Total Profit
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6-23
• Total profit equals profit per unit times quantity:
Total profit = (p – ATC) x q
Total Profit
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6-24
• The profit-maximizing producer doesn’t seek to maximize per-unit profits.
• The profit-maximizing producer has no particular desire to produce at that rate of output where ATC is at a minimum.
• Total profits are maximized only where
p = MC.
Total Profit
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6-25
Figure 6.6
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6-26
Supply Behavior
• How firms make production decisions helps explain how the market establishes prices and quantities.
• Supply is the ability and willingness to sell specific quantities of a good at alternative prices in a given time period.
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6-27
A Firm’s Supply
• Competitive firms adjust the quantity supplied until MC = price.
• The marginal cost curve is the short-run supply curve for a competitive firm.
LO-4
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6-28
Figure 6.7 (a) & (b)
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6-29
Figure 6.7 (c) & (d)
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6-30
Supply Shifts
• Marginal costs determine the supply decisions of a firm.
• Anything that alters marginal cost will change supply behavior.
LO-4
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6-31
• Important influences on marginal cost (and supply behavior) are:– The price of factor inputs – Technology – Expectations
Supply Shifts
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6-32
Market Supply
• Market supply is the total quantity of a good that sellers are willing and able to sell at alternative prices in a given time period, ceteris paribus.
• The market supply curve is the sum of the marginal cost curves of all the firms.
LO-4
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6-33
Competitive Market Supply
• Determinants of the market supply of a competitive industry:– The price of factor inputs – Technology – Expectations – The number of firms in the industry
LO-4
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6-34
Industry Entry and Exit
• To understand how competitive markets work, we focus on changes in equilibrium rather than on a static equilibrium.
• The number of firms in a competitive industry is not fixed.
• Industry entry and exit is a driving force affecting market equilibrium.
LO-5
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6-35
Entry
• Additional firms will enter the industry when profits are plentiful.
• Economic profits attract firms.– More firms enter the industry.– The market supply curve shifts to the
right.– The price decreases.
• Industry output increases and price falls when firms enter an industry.
LO-5
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6-36
Figure 6.8
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6-37
Tendency Toward Zero Economic Profits
• New firms continue to enter a competitive industry so long as profits exist.
• Once price falls to the level of minimum average cost, all economic profits disappear.
LO-5
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6-38
• Entry is the force driving down market prices.
• Price falls until there are no economic profits.
• At that point, average total cost is at a minimum.
Tendency Toward Zero Economic Profits
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6-39
Exit
• Firms exit the industry when profit opportunities look better elsewhere.
• Firms leave the industry if price falls below average cost.
• As firms exit the industry, the market supply curve shifts to the left.
LO-5
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6-40
• Price rises until there are no economic losses.
• At that point, average total cost is at a minimum.
Exit
LO-5
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6-41
Equilibrium
• The existence of profits in a competitive industry induces entry.
• The existence of losses in a competitive industry induces exits.
LO-5
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6-42
Long-Run Equilibrium
• In long-run competitive market equilibrium:– Price equals minimum average total cost.– Economic profit is eliminated.
• As long as it is easy for existing producers to expand production or for new firms to enter an industry, economic profits will not last long.
LO-5
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6-43
Figure 6.9
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6-44
Low Barriers to Entry
• There are no significant barriers to entry in competitive markets.
• Barriers to entry are obstacles that make it difficult or impossible for would-be producers to enter a market, like patents.
LO-1
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6-45
Characteristics of a Competitive Market
• Many firms
• Identical products
• Low entry barriers
• MC = p
• Zero economic profit
• Perfect information
LO-1
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6-46
The Relentless Profit Squeeze
• The unrelenting squeeze on prices and profits is a fundamental characteristic of the competitive process.
• The market mechanism works best in competitive markets.– Market mechanism – the use of market
prices and sales to signal desired outputs.
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6-47
Maximum Efficiency
• Competitive pressure on prices forces suppliers to produce at the least possible cost.
• Society gets the most it can from its available scarce resources.
LO-1
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6-48
Zero Economic Profits
• All economic profits are eliminated at the limit of the competitive process.
LO-5
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6-49
The Social Value of Losses
• Economic losses are a signal to producers that they are not using society’s scarce resources in the best way.
LO-5
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6-50
Policy Perspective
• Competitive markets present a strong argument for laissez faire.
• Government should promote competition because markets do a good job of allocating resources.
• This means keeping markets open and accessible to new entrants by dismantling entry barriers.
LO-1
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End of Chapter 6