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Industry Supply; Equilibrium Under

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Lecture 11, Chapter 10, Perfect Competition. Chapter 10, Figure 1 Short-Run Industry Supply ... Lecture 11, Chapter 10, Perfect Competition. Long Run Supply ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Industry Supply; Equilibrium Under


1
Lecture 11 Industry Supply Equilibrium
Under Perfect Competition
2
Short Run Industry Supply
  • Consider a group of firms that produce lime
    (calcium oxide and calcium hydroxide).
  • What does the industry supply curve of lime look
    like in the short run?
  • We consider two hypothetical cases (a) firms
    have identical costs, (b) firms differ in their
    cost structures.

3
Short Run Industry SupplyAll Firms Identical
  • Figure 1 below graphs industry supply in the case
    of identical lime producers.
  • This is the sum of the individual firm supply
    curves, but below p5 no one enters because
    pltAVC. For p at least equal to 5 supply follows
    MC.
  • With limited numbers of firms supply is upward
    sloping.

4
Chapter 10, Figure 1Short-Run Industry
Supply With Identical Lime Producers
5
Short Run Profits and Price
  • Figure 2 shows something interesting that is
    obvious when you think about it.
  • At a price of 7 firms are profitable.
  • At a price of 5 firms take a loss equal to fixed
    cost, the largest loss possible.
  • The number of firms is given so the value of the
    firm varies directly with price.

6
Chapter 10, Figure 2Price, Profitability, and
Firm Value in the Short Run
7
Short Run Industry SupplyDifferent Cost
Structures
  • Figure 3 is a graph of industry supply when firms
    have different costs.
  • Firm 1 has an entry price p5, at minimum AVC.
    Firm 2 has an entry price p6, at its minimum
    AVC.
  • Firm 1 has lower marginal cost at the same output
    as firm 2. Overall firm 1 is more efficient than
    firm 2.

8
Chapter 10, Figure 3Short-Run Market Supply with
Different Lime Producers
9
Short Run Industry SupplyDifferent Cost
Structures
  • In figure 3 firms jump from zero to positive
    output when price reaches minimum AVC.
  • When the second firm enters, that introduces a
    flat in the supply curve.
  • But overall, supply is upward sloping, just as in
    figure 1.

10
Long Run Supply
  • Well consider three cases
  • (A) All firms have identical costs costs stay
    the same regardless of industry output.
  • (B) Firms have different costs but costs stay the
    same regardless of industry output.
  • (C) Each firms costs rise or fall as industry
    output increases.

11
Long Run Supply Constant Cost Industry
  • Case (A) all firms have identical costs and
    costs do not depend on industry output. This is
    a constant cost industry.
  • Figure 4 below graphs this case for the vegetable
    oil industry.
  • Entry of firms drives price down to the minimum
    AC of 10. Pure profits equal zero for each firm.

12
Chapter 10, Figure 4 Long-Run Firm Supply With
Identical Vegetable Oil Firms (a)
13
Long Run Supply Constant Cost Industry
  • Figure 5 graphs the industry supply curve for the
    constant cost vegetable oil industry.
  • A vast supply of firms exists whose minimum
    average cost (entry price) is always 10.
  • Thus industry supply is flat or perfectly elastic.

14
Chapter 10, Figure 5Long-Run Market Supply With
Identical Vegetable Oil Firms (b)
15
Long and Short Run Supply of Vegetable Oil
  • Though the supply curve of vegetable oil is
    perfectly elastic in the long run, it is upward
    sloping in the short run.
  • Why? Because the number of firms is limited in
    the short run and supply follows the sum of
    individual firms MC curves. See figure 6 on the
    next slide.

16
Chapter 10, Figure 6 Short and Long Run Supply
of Vegetable Oil
17
Rising World Supply of Cotton
  • Figure 7 below illustrates case (B) Cotton
    producers have different costs, but these costs
    differ in every cotton-picking country.
  • This causes a rising supply curve (as in figure
    3, its short run counterpart).

18
Chapter 10, Figure 7Upward-Sloping Long
Run Supply of Cotton
19
Rising and Falling Costs
  • Figures 8 and 9 illustrates case (C ) the firms
    costs rise or fall as industry output increases.
  • In figure 8 identical firms experience rising
    costs as the industry expands production. Long
    run supply slopes up.
  • The opposite is true in figure 9 long run supply
    slopes down.

20
Chapter 10, Figure 8Long Run Supply of
an Increasing Cost Industry
21
Chapter 10, Figure 9 Long Run Supply of
a Decreasing Cost Industry
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