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Market structures

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Market structures
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These are a few power point presentations on Market Structures in Economics.

Shared by: Gaurav Batra
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17
posted:
10/20/2011
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32
Market Structure

Market Structure

• The selling environment in which a firm

produces and sells its product is called a

market structure.



• Defined by three characteristics:

– The number of firms in the market

– The ease of entry and exit of firms

– The degree of product differentiation

Introduction

• Perfect competition, with an infinite

number of firms, and monopoly, with a

single firm, are polar opposites.

• Monopolistic competition and oligopoly lie

between these two extremes.

Perfect Competition

A perfectly competitive market has

the following characteristics:

There are many buyers and sellers in the

market.

The goods offered by the various sellers

are largely the same.

Firms can freely enter or exit the market.

The Meaning of Competition

As a result of its characteristics, the

perfectly competitive market has the

following outcomes:

The actions of any single buyer or

seller in the market have a negligible

impact on the market price.

Each buyer and seller takes the market

price as given.

 Thus, each buyer and seller is a price taker.

Perfect Competition

Profit-Maximizing Level of

Output

• The goal of the firm is to maximize

profits.

• Profit is the difference between total

revenue and total cost.

Revenue of a Competitive Firm



Total revenue for a firm is the

selling price times the quantity

sold.



TR = (P X Q)

Revenue of a Competitive Firm



Marginal revenue is the change in

total revenue from an additional

unit sold.



MR =TR/ Q

Revenue of a Competitive Firm







For competitive firms, marginal

revenue equals the price of the

good.

Total, Average, and Marginal

Revenue for a Competitive Firm



Quantity Price Total Revenue Average Revenue Marginal Revenue

(Q) (P) (TR=PxQ) (AR=TR/Q) (MR=T R / Q )

1 $6.00 $6.00 $6.00

2 $6.00 $12.00 $6.00 $6.00

3 $6.00 $18.00 $6.00 $6.00

4 $6.00 $24.00 $6.00 $6.00

5 $6.00 $30.00 $6.00 $6.00

6 $6.00 $36.00 $6.00 $6.00

7 $6.00 $42.00 $6.00 $6.00

8 $6.00 $48.00 $6.00 $6.00

Profit Determination Using Total

Cost and Revenue Curves

TC TR

$385 Loss

Total cost, revenue









350

315 Maximum profit =$81 Profit

280

245

210 $130

175

140

105 Profit =$45

70

35 Loss

0

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Quantity

Profit Maximization Using

Total Revenue and Total Cost

• Profit is maximized where the vertical

distance between total revenue and

total cost is greatest.

• At that output, MR (the slope of the

total revenue curve) and MC (the slope

of the total cost curve) are equal.

Profit-Maximizing Level of

Output

• Marginal revenue (MR) – the change

in total revenue associated with a

change in quantity.

• Marginal cost (MC) – the change in

total cost associated with a change in

quantity.



• A firm maximizes profit when MC = MR.

How to Maximize Profit

• If marginal revenue does not equal

marginal cost, a firm can increase profit

by changing output.

• The supplier will continue to produce as

long as marginal cost is less than

marginal revenue.

How to Maximize Profit

• The supplier will cut back on production

if marginal cost is greater than marginal

revenue.

• Thus, the profit-maximizing condition of a

competitive firm is MC = MR = P.

Again! MR=MC

• Profit is maximized when MR=MC.

– If the cost of producing one more unit is

less than the revenue it generates, then a

profit is available for the firm that

increases production by one unit.

– If the cost of producing one more unit is

more than the revenue it generates, then

increasing production reduces profit.

Profit Maximization: Using MR

and MC curves

Profit Maximization: The

Numbers

MR=MC

Q P TR TC TR-TC MR MC ATC

0 $1 $0 $1.00 -$1.00 $1

1 $1 $1 $2.00 -$1.00 $1 $1.00 $2.00

2 $1 $2 $2.80 -$0.80 $1 $0.80 $1.40

3 $1 $3 $3.50 -$0.50 $1 $0.70 $1.17

4 $1 $4 $4.00 $0.00 $1 $0.50 $1.00

5 $1 $5 $4.50 $0.50 $1 $0.50 $0.90

6 $1 $6 $5.20 $0.80 $1 $0.70 $0.87

7 $1 $7 $6.00 $1.00 $1 $0.80 $0.86

8 $1 $8 $6.86 $1.14 $1 $0.86 $0.86

9 $1 $9 $7.86 $1.14 $1 $1.00 $0.87

10 $1 $10 $9.36 $0.64 $1 $1.50 $0.94

11 $1 $11 $12.00 -$1.00 $1 $2.64 $1.09

The Marginal Cost Curve Is

the Supply Curve

• The marginal cost curve is the firm's

supply curve above the point where

price exceeds average variable cost.

• The MC curve tells the competitive firm

how much it should produce at a given

price.

The Interaction of Firms and Markets

Price Firm Market

And Price S1

Costs MC





A

a S2

$10

P=MR0

B

b ATC

ATC c

=$7 P=MR1

AVC

d







D0



q4 q3 q2 q1

10 units

qF Q1 Q2 QM

The Marginal-Cost Curve and the

Firm’s Supply Decision...

Costs This section of the

and firm’s MC curve is

Revenue also the firm’s

supply curve (long- MC

run).

P2

P1 ATC



AVC









0 Q1 Q2 Quantity

Determining Profit and Loss

• Find output where MC = MR.

– The intersection of MC = MR (P)

determines the quantity the firm will

produce if it wishes to maximize profits.

• Find profit per unit where MC = MR.

– Drop a line down from where MC equals MR,

and then to the ATC curve.

– This is the profit per unit.

– Extend a line back to the vertical axis to

identify total profit.

Determining Profit and Loss

• The firm makes a profit when the ATC

curve is below the MR curve.

• The firm incurs a loss when the ATC curve

is above the MR curve.

Determining Profit and Loss

From a Graph

• Zero profit or loss where MC=MR.

– Firms can earn zero profit or even a loss

where MC = MR.

– Even though economic profit is zero, all

resources, including entrepreneurs, are being

paid their opportunity costs.

Determining Profits Graphically

Price MC Price MC Price MC

65 65 65

60 60 60

55 55 55

50 50 50 ATC

45 45 ATC 45

40 D A P = MR 40 40 Loss P = MR

35 35 35

Profit P = MR

30 B ATC 30 30 AVC

25 C AVC 25 AVC 25

20 E 20 20

15 15 15

10 10 10

5 5 5

0 0 0

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 12

Quantity Quantity Quantity

(a) Profit case (b) Zero profit case (c) Loss case

Loss Minimization

Average cost of a unit of output









Market

price

falls



Revenue

generated by a

unit of output

The Firm’s Short-Run

Decision to Shut Down

The firm shuts down if the revenue it

gets from producing is less than the

variable cost of production.

Shut down if TR TC

Enter if TR/Q > TC/Q

Enter if P > ATC


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