Perfect Competition
Perfect Competition
Perfect Competition
COMPETITION 11
CHAPTER
Objectives
Price Takers
In perfect competition, each firm is a price taker.
A price taker is a firm that cannot influence the price of a
good or service.
No single firm can influence the price—it must “take” the
equilibrium market price.
Each firm’s output is a perfect substitute for the output of
the other firms, so the demand for each firm’s output is
perfectly elastic.
Competition
Profit-Maximizing Output
A perfectly competitive firm chooses the output that
maximizes its economic profit.
One way to find the profit maximizing output is to look at
the firm’s the total revenue and total cost curves.
Figure 11.2 on the next slide looks at these curves along
with the firm’s total profit curve.
The Firm’s Decisions
in Perfect Competition
At intermediate output
levels, the firm earns an
economic profit.
Marginal Analysis
The firm can use marginal analysis to determine the profit-
maximizing output.
Because marginal revenue is constant and marginal cost
eventually increases as output increases, profit is
maximized by producing the output at which marginal
revenue, MR, equals marginal cost, MC.
Figure 11.3 on the next slide shows the marginal analysis
that determines the profit-maximizing output.
The Firm’s Decisions in Perfect
Competition
In part (a) price equals ATC and the firm earns zero
economic profit (normal profit).
The Firm’s Decisions in Perfect
Competition
In part (c) price is less than ATC and the firm incurs an
economic loss—economic profit is negative and the firm
does not even earn normal profit.
The Firm’s Decisions in Perfect
Competition
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Curve
A perfectly competitive firm’s short run supply curve shows
how the firm’s profit-maximizing output varies as the
market price varies, other things remaining the same.
Because the firm produces the output at which marginal
cost equals marginal revenue, and because marginal
revenue equals price, the firm’s supply curve is linked to
its marginal cost curve.
But there is a price below which the firm produces nothing
and shuts down temporarily.
The Firm’s Decisions in Perfect
Competition
Short-Run Industry
Supply Curve
The short-run industry
supply curve shows the
quantity supplied by the
industry at each price
when the plant size of
each firm and the number
of firms remain constant.
The Firm’s Decisions in Perfect
Competition
At a price equal to
minimum average variable
cost—the shutdown price
—the industry supply
curve is perfectly elastic
because some firms will
produce the shutdown
quantity and others will
produces zero.
Output, Price, and Profit in Perfect
Competition
Short-Run Equilibrium
Short-run industry supply
and industry demand
determine the market
price and output.
Figure 11.7 shows a short-
run equilibrium at the
intersection of the demand
and supply curves.
Output, Price, and Profit in Perfect
Competition
A Change in Demand
An increase in demand
bring a rightward shift of
the industry demand
curve: the price rises and
the quantity increases.
A decrease in demand
bring a leftward shift of the
industry demand curve:
the price falls and the
quantity decreases.
Output, Price, and Profit in Perfect
Competition
Long-Run Adjustments
In short-run equilibrium, a firm may earn an economic
profit, earn normal profit, or incur an economic loss and
which of these states exists determines the further
decisions the firm makes in the long run.
In the long run, the firm may:
Enter or exit an industry
Change its plant size
Output, Price, and Profit in Perfect
Competition
If the price is $25, firms earn zero economic profit with the
current plant.
Output, Price, and Profit in Perfect
Competition
Long-Run Equilibrium
Long-run equilibrium occurs in a competitive industry
when:
Economic profit is zero, so firms neither enter nor exit
the industry.
Long-run average cost is at its minimum, so firms don’t
change their plant size.
Changing Tastes and Advancing
Technology
Technological Change
New technologies are constantly discovered that lower
costs.
A new technology enables firms to producer at a lower
average cost and lower marginal cost—firms’ cost curves
shift downward.
Firms that adopt the new technology earn an economic
profit.
Changing Tastes and Advancing
Technology