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Chapter 23: Pure Competition

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2. Informed buyers...must know that there are lots of identical products out there ... Paying for more than VC so you have some left to pay for FC ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 23: Pure Competition


1
Chapter 23 Pure Competition
  • Content and Visuals from McConnell/Brues
    Economics

2
Overview
  • Market Power
  • Market Structures
  • Perfect Competition
  • Characteristics
  • Price setting
  • 31 total slides

3
Who has the power?
  • In total there can only be 100 of market power,
    or the ability to influence the price
  • The more of it you have the more profit you are
    able to make
  • Think about the activity last class
  • Depending on how many sellers there are we create
    4 different market structures

4
4 market structures
  • MONOPOLYideal situation for seller when they
    alone have ability to sell product (1 seller100
    market power)
  • Examples?
  • OLIGOPOLYfew sellers that dominate a market
    (3-12 sellers sharing 70 of market power)
  • Examples?

5
Cont.
  • MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITIONlots of sellers with
    SLIGHTLY different products, meaning slightly
    different prices
  • Examples?
  • PERFECT COMPETITIONlots of sellers with
    IDENTICAL products, meaning identical prices
  • Examples?

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Doesnt exist except in theory
  • Most would argue that perfect competition doesnt
    exist todaysome things might be close but true
    perfect competition doesnt
  • Why?
  • What makes a market perfect?

8
Perfection Defined
  • In order to eliminate the ability of a business
    to change the price, a few conditions or
    characteristics must be met
  • 1. Lots of buyers and sellersno one big enough
    to really matter
  • 2. Informed buyersmust know that there are lots
    of identical products out there

9
  • 3. Easy entry/exitsellers must be able to join
    or leave a market quickly with few BARRIERS TO
    ENTRY (laws, tech.)
  • 4. PRICE TAKERSno ability to change
    pricecannot raise it since smart consumers know
    can get it cheaper somewhere elsewill not lower
    it since can SELL AS MANY AS YOU WANT at market
    price

10
What does it look like?
  • Since you can sell all of your products at the
    market price (you are a PRICE TAKER and cant
    influence it), the demand curve for your product
    is PERFECTLY ELASTICmeaning its horizontal
  • Other curvesATC, AVC, MCare the same

11
You know the pricehow much should you make?
  • The beauty of microeconomics is that it doesnt
    require any thought
  • We learn things as rules and never really have
    to understandinstead we just need to know
  • You want to produce the amount that will make you
    the greatest profit
  • By LAW that occurs at the point where the PRICE
    MARGINAL COST (PMC)

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Lets Look
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15
Regardless
  • It doesnt matter what the graph looks like, or
    whether or not you are making money, production
    always occurs at PMC
  • If you are above the ATC then you are making a
    profit
  • If below it you are losing money by producing
  • Would you ever produce when losing money?
  • Yes

16
Variable Costs changefixed dont
  • Variable costs are what?
  • Land Labor costsincrease with output
  • Fixed costs are what?
  • Capital expensesdont change with output
  • Even if you are losing money want to shut-down
    you still have to pay for the fixed costs (ie
    factory, land, loan, etc)

17
Shut-down Point
  • That being said you always continue producing
    until the market price is below the min AVC point
  • The bottom of that curve is always your shut-down
    point
  • Anything under that you automatically shut-down
    and worry about loss later

18
Continue working to lose less
  • However, it is possible for you to lose money
    even when you keep working
  • If the market price is between the min ATC and
    min AVC you are losing money, but will lose less
    if you continue working
  • Paying for more than VC so you have some left to
    pay for FC
  • In the SHORT RUN, the supply curve becomes the
    segment of MC above the min AVC level

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21
What about the long-run?
  • In the short-run you might continue producing if
    losing money
  • Would you in the long run?
  • NEVERin the long run you always shut down if
    losing moneyremember the long run is when
    capital and fixed costs can changemeaning go away

22
How affect market?
  • Since there is easy entry/exit firms can come and
    go as they please
  • If not making money firms will leave industry,
    reducing the supply which raises the market price
  • But if you are making money, firms will be
    encourage to join due to that ECONOMIC PROFIT and
    increase the supply, which lowers the market price

23
Long run doesnt exist
  • Like the concept of perfect competition, one
    could argue that the long run doesnt exist
  • Conditions constantly changing
  • Even still, this creates the most important idea
    of this chapter
  • The price will adjust as firms enter/exit,
    eventually settling at the lowest possible price

24
Productive Efficiency
  • Think backwhen does productive efficiency occur
    as equation?
  • P min ATC
  • As the market balances, the price will always
    fall to the min ATC of the cheapest company
  • In other structures, allocative efficiency
    dominates (P MC)

25
No Economic Profit for YOU!!!
  • If the P ATC then you are selling for what it
    costs to produce
  • This means there is a normal profit, but no
    economic profit
  • In the short run it is possible to have an
    economic profit, but not in the long run

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Price will rule all
  • Price will eventually find its way to the
    perfect level
  • Until then, if you have P gt MC the market is
    UNDERALLOCATING resources to the production of
    that productneed to make more
  • If P lt MC you are OVERALLOCATING need to make
    less

29
In the end both of us benefit
  • As a consumer you dont buy something unless you
    benefit, they wont sell it unless they do
  • Even if there is no economic profit, or a lot of
    it, there will still be both CONSUMER PRODUCER
    SURPLUS, or extra benefit
  • There is typically always a surplus for both

30
  • Whats it look like?

31
Summary
  • 4 different market structures
  • Characteristics of perfect competition
  • Graph of itincluding normal profit, economic
    profit, and loss
  • When you shut down
  • The long run productive efficiency of it
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