Perfect Competition: Answers To The Review Quizzes
Perfect Competition: Answers To The Review Quizzes
Perfect Competition: Answers To The Review Quizzes
12
PERFECT
COMPETITION
2.
In perfect competition, what is the relationship between the demand for the firms output and
the market demand?
The market demand curve for the goods and services in a perfectly competitive market is downward
sloping. However, no single firm in this market can influence the price at which it sells its output. This
point means a firm that is a price taker must take the equilibrium market price as given, and the firm faces
a perfectly elastic demand.
3.
In perfect competition, why is a firms marginal revenue curve also the demand curve for the
firms output?
A perfectly competitive firms demand curve is a horizontal line at the market price. This result means that
the price it receives is the same for every unit sold. The marginal revenue received by the firm is the change
in total revenue from selling one more unit, which is the constant market price. So a perfectly competitive
firms demand curve is the same as its marginal revenue curve.
4.
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1.
Why does a firm in perfect competition produce the quantity at which marginal cost equals
price?
A firms total profit is maximized by producing the level of output at which marginal revenue for the last
unit produced equals its marginal cost, or MR = MC. In a perfectly competitive market, MR is equal to the
market price P for all levels of output. These points imply that a perfectly competitive firm will maximize
profit by producing output where P = MC.
2.
What is the lowest price at which a firm produces an output? Explain why.
The lowest price at which a firm will produce output is the price that equals the firms minimum AVC. At
this price the firm has just enough total revenue to cover its total variable costs. The firms loss is equal to
its fixed costs. At any lower market price the firms loss would be greater than its fixed costs. In this case
the firm can avoid losses that are greater than its fixed cost by shutting down.
3.
What is the relationship between a firms supply curve, its marginal cost curve, and its average
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Page 283
1.
2.
In perfect competition, when market demand increases, explain how the price of the good and
the output and profit of each firm changes in the short run.
When market demand increases, the market price of the good rises, and the market quantity increases.
Because price equals marginal revenue, the rise in the price means marginal revenue rises. As a result, each
firm moves up its marginal cost curve and increases the quantity it produces. The firms profit rises (or its
economic loss decreases). If the firm had been making zero economic profit before the increase in demand,
after the increase the firm earns an economic profit.
3.
In perfect competition, when market demand decreases, explain how the price of the good and
the output and profit of each firm changes in the short run.
When market demand decreases, the market price of the good falls and the market quantity decreases.
Because the price equals marginal revenue, the fall in the price means marginal revenue falls. As a result,
each firm moves down its marginal cost curve so each firm decreases the quantity it produces. The firms
profit falls (or its economic loss increases). If the firm had been making zero economic profit before the
decrease in demand, after the decrease the firm incurs an economic loss.
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1.
What triggers entry in a competitive market? Describe the process that ends further entry.
When firms in a competitive market make an economic profit, the economic profit serves as an
inducement to other firms to enter the market. As the other firms enter, the supply increases and the price
falls. The fall in the price eventually eliminates the economic profit, at which time entry stops.
2.
What triggers exit in a competitive market? Describe the process that ends further exit.
When firms in a competitive market are incurring an economic loss, some of the firms will exit the market.
As these firms exit, the supply decreases and the price rises. The rise in the price eventually eliminates the
economic loss, at which time exit stops.
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1.
PERFECT COMPETITION
193
profit and exit stops. In the long run, with no external economies or diseconomies the market price returns
to the original level, market output is less than the original amount, and economic profit for each firm
returns to zero.
2.
3.
Describe the course of events in a competitive market following the adoption of a new
technology. What happens to output, price, and economic profit in the short run and in the
long run?
Technological advances result in lower costs for the firm that adopts them and initially these firms make an
economic profit. This causes two actions to occur in the market: i) firms from outside the industry that
have adopted the new technology enter the market; ii) firms with old technology either exit the market or
adopt the new technology. These two actions shift the industry supply rightward, decreasing market price
and increasing market quantity. In the long run, all firms in the industry will be new technology firms,
economic profit for each firm will return to zero, market quantity will increase, and market price will fall to
the new minimum ATC for each firm.
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1.
State the conditions that must be met for resources to be allocated efficiently.
Resource use is efficient when the economy produces the goods and services that people value most highly.
This situation requires that consumers are on their demand curves, thereby allocating their budgets to get
the most possible value from their income. If the people who consume a good or service are the only ones
who benefit from it, then the market demand curve measures the benefit to the entire society and is the
marginal social benefit curve. Efficient resource use also requires that firms are on their supply curves,
thereby getting the most value out of their resources. If the firms that produce a good or service bear all the
costs of producing it, then the market supply curve measures the marginal cost to the entire society and the
market supply curve is the marginal social cost curve. And resources are used efficiently when marginal
social benefit equals marginal social cost.
2.
Describe the choices that consumers make and explain why consumers are efficient on the
market demand curve.
Consumers allocate their budgets so they get the most value from their budgets. When consumers are on
their demand curves, they are getting the most value out of their resources and are efficient.
3.
Describe the choices that producers make and explain why producers are efficient on the
market supply curve.
Competitive firms maximize profit. To do so, they must be technologically efficient and economically
efficient. As a result, when competitive firms are on their supply curves maximizing their profit, they are
getting the most value out of their resources and are efficient.
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PERFECT COMPETITION
195
Lins fortune cookies are identical to the fortune cookies made by dozens of other firms and
there is free entry in the fortune cookie market. Buyers and sellers are well informed about
prices.
a. In what type of market does Lins operate?
Lin is operating in a perfectly competitive market.
d. If fortune cookies sell for $10 a box and Lin offers his cookies for sale at $10.50 a box, how
many boxes does he sell?
Lin will sell no boxes of fortune cookies.
e. If fortune cookies sell for $10 a box and Lin offers his cookies for sale at $9.50 a box, how
many boxes does he sell?
All buyers will want to buy Lins cookies so the demand for Lins cookies is essentially infinite. More
realistically, Lin would probably sell the quantity that maximizes his profit but that profit will be less than
if he sells at the going market price of $10 a box.
f.
What is the elasticity of demand for Lins fortune cookies and how does it differ from the
elasticity of the market demand for fortune cookies?
The elasticity of demand for Lins cookies is infinite. The elasticity of demand in the market for cookies is
not infinite.
2.
(ii)
Output
(pizzas per hour)
0
1
2
3
4
5
Total cost
(dollars per hour)
10
21
30
41
54
69
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(iii)
pizzas an hour is $13. So the marginal cost of the third pizza is half-way between $11 and $13,
which is $12. Marginal cost equals marginal revenue when Pat produces 3 pizzas an hour.
Economic profit equals total revenue minus total cost. Total revenue equals $36 ($12 multiplied by
3). Total cost is $41, so economic profit is $5.
At $10 a pizza, Pats profit-maximizing output is 2 pizzas an hour and economic profit is $10.
Pats maximizes its profit by producing the quantity at which marginal revenue equals marginal
cost. Marginal revenue equals price, which is $10 a pizza. The marginal cost of increasing output
from 1 to 2 pizzas an hour is $9 ($30 minus $21). The marginal cost of increasing output from 2 to
3 pizzas an hour is $11. So the marginal cost of the second pizza is half-way between $9 and $11,
which is $10. Marginal cost equals marginal revenue when Pat produces 2 pizzas an hour.
Economic profit equals total revenue minus total cost. Total revenue equals $20 ($10 multiplied by
2). Total cost is $30, so economic profit is $10.
b. What is Pats shutdown point and what is Pats economic profit if it shuts down temporarily?
The shutdown point is the price that equals minimum average variable cost. To calculate total variable
cost, subtract total fixed cost ($10when output is zero, total variable cost is $0, so total cost at zero
output equals total fixed cost) from total cost. Average variable cost equals total variable cost divided by the
quantity produced. The average variable cost of producing 2 pizzas is $10 a pizza. Average variable cost is a
minimum when marginal cost equals average variable cost. The marginal cost of producing 2 pizzas is $10.
So Pats shutdown point is a price of $10 a pizza. When Pat shuts down the economic profit is actually
an economic loss equal to Pats fixed cost. In particular Pats economic loss is $10.
d. At what price will firms with costs identical to Pats exit the pizza market in the long run?
Pats and firms with the same costs as Pats will exit the pizza market if the price is less than $13 a pizza in
the long run. Pats Pizza Kitchen and other firms with the same costs will leave the market if they incur an
economic loss in the long run. To incur an economic loss, the price must be below the minimum average
total cost. Average total cost equals total cost divided by the quantity produced. For example, the average
total cost of producing 2 pizzas is $15 a pizza. Average total cost is a minimum when it equals marginal
cost. The average total cost of producing 3 pizzas is $13.67, and the average total cost of producing 4
pizzas is $13.50. Marginal cost when Pats produces 3 pizzas is $12 and marginal cost when Pats produces
4 pizzas is $14. At 3 pizzas, marginal cost is less than average total cost; at 4 pizzas, marginal cost exceeds
average total cost. So minimum average total cost occurs between 3 and 4 pizzas$13 at 3.5 pizzas an
hour.
e. At what price will firms with costs identical to Pats enter the pizza market in the long run?
Pats and firms with the same costs as Pats will enter the pizza market if the price is greater than $13 a
pizza in the long run. The reasoning is essentially the reverse of the reasoning behind the answer to part d.
Pats Pizza Kitchen and other firms with the same costs will enter the industry if they can make an
economic profit. To make an economic profit, the price must be above the minimum average total cost.
Average total cost equals total cost divided by the quantity produced. For example, the average total cost of
producing 2 pizzas is $15 a pizza. Average total cost is a minimum when it equals marginal cost. The
average total cost of producing 3 pizzas is $13.67, and the average total cost of producing 4 pizzas is
$13.50. Marginal cost when Pats produces 3 pizzas is $12 and marginal cost when Pats produces 4 pizzas
is $14. At 3 pizzas, marginal cost is less than average total cost; at 4 pizzas, marginal cost exceeds average
total cost. So minimum average total cost occurs between 3 and 4 pizzas$13 at 3.5 pizzas an hour.
PERFECT COMPETITION
3.
Price
(dollars per box)
3.65
5.20
6.80
8.40
10.00
11.60
13.20
197
Quantity demanded
(thousands of boxes per week)
500
450
400
350
300
250
200
d. What is the economic profit made or economic loss incurred by each firm?
Each firm incurs an economic loss of $581 a week. Each firm produces 350 boxes at an average total cost
of $10.06 a box. The firm sells the 350 boxes for $8.40 a box. The firm incurs a loss on each box of $1.66
and incurs a total economic loss of $581 a week.
e. Do firms have an incentive to enter or exit the market in the long run?
In the long run, some firms exit the industry because they are incurring an economic loss.
f.
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4.
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5.
Price
(dollars per box)
2.95
4.13
5.30
6.48
7.65
8.83
10.00
11.18
Quantity demanded
(thousands of boxes per week)
500
450
400
350
300
250
200
150
The market price is $7.65 a box, the equilibrium market quantity is 300,000 boxes a week, and each firm
incurs an economic loss of $834 a week. When the price is $7.65 a box, each firm produces 300 boxes and
the total quantity supplied by the 1,000 firms is 300,000 boxes a week. The market quantity demanded at
$7.65 is 300,000 boxes a week. Each firm produces 300 boxes at an average total cost of $10.43 a box. The firm
sells the 300 boxes for $7.65 a box. At this price and quantity the firm incurs a loss on each box of $2.78
and incurs an economic loss of $834 a week.
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199
Figure 12.1 the short-run supply curve and the demand curve from Problem 3 are S0 and D0, and the
short-run supply and the demand curve from this problem are S1 and D1. The long-run supply curve is
illustrated as the thicker line labeled LS.
6.
b. Draw a graph to show the economic slowdown on Sterlings output in the short run.
Figure 12.2 shows the fall in the truck producers
marginal revenue. The producer cuts its output from
13 to 12 trucks a week.
e. Explain why a producer of trucks might incur an economic loss in the short run as the price
of fuel rises.
If before the rise in the price of fuel, the firm was in long-run equilibrium, the fall in the market price in
the short run leads the firm to incur an economic loss.
f.
If some truck producers decide to exit the market before the price of fuel falls, explain how
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the economic profit or loss of the remaining truck producers will change.
When firms exit the market, the market supply of trucks decreases, and the market price of a truck begins
to rise. The higher price reduces the economic loss of firms remaining in the market. Firms will continue
to exit until the firms remaining the in the market are making zero economic profit.
g. Explain how the loss of high-paying jobs will affect the economic profit of grocery stores in
St. Thomas in the short run.
When workers lose their good-paying jobs, income decreases and the market demand for groceries
decreases. Grocery stores will make less economic profit and incur economic losses in the short run.
h. Draw a graph to show the effects of the loss of high-paying jobs on the economic profit of
local grocery stores in the short run.
Figure 12.2a shows the effect of the decrease in income on the economic profit of grocery stores.
7.
c. A consumer become better off by making a substitution away from this market?
In the long-run equilibrium, consumers cannot become better off by substituting away from this market.
Demand curves reflect consumers allocating their budget to get the most value possible from their budget.
Therefore in the long-run equilibrium consumers have already allocated their budgets so that they cannot
make themselves better off by substituting away from this market.
PERFECT COMPETITION
8.
201
Explain and illustrate graphically how the growing world population is influencing the world
market for wheat and a representative individual wheat farmer.
The increase in the world population increases the market demand for wheat. The price of wheat rises so
that wheat farmers increase the quantity of wheat they produce and make an economic profit. The
economic profit attracts entry by new farmers, which increases supply, lowers the price, and eliminates
economic profit. Figure 12.3a and 12.3b illustrate this process. In Figure 12.3a the market demand
increases and the market demand curve shifts rightward from D0 to D1. Initially the supply curve remains
S0. The increase in demand raises the price of a bushel of wheat to $5 and increases the quantity to 20
billion bushels. In Figure 12.3b the higher price raises the firms marginal revenue and the marginal
revenue curve shifts upward from MR0 to MR1. The firm responds by increasing the quantity it produces
from 200,000 bushels to 225,000 bushels. It makes an economic profit because the price exceeds its
average total cost. The economic profit attracts entry by new firms. Entry increases the market supply and
shifts the supply curve rightward, in Figure 12.3a, from S0 to S1. Assuming the industry has neither
external economies nor external diseconomies, entry takes place until the price falls back to the initial price,
$4 a bushel. The market equilibrium quantity increases to 25 billion bushels. Figure 12.3b shows that at
this lower price each firm decreases the quantity it produces back to its original amount, 200,000 bushels.
The firms now make zero profit and there is no longer an incentive for new firms to enter the market.
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10.
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Price
(dollars per smoothie)
1.90
2.00
2.20
2.91
4.25
5.25
5.50
Quantity demanded
(smoothies per hour)
1,000
950
800
700
550
400
300
The market price is the price at which the market quantity demanded equals the market quantity supplied.
The firms supply curve is the same as its marginal cost curve at prices above minimum average variable
cost. Average variable cost is a minimum when marginal cost equals average variable cost. Marginal cost
equals average variable cost at the quantity 7 smoothies an hour. So the firms supply curve is the same as
the marginal cost curve for outputs greater than and equal to 7 smoothies. When the price is $2.91 a
smoothie, each firm produces
Output
Marginal cost
Average
Average
7 smoothies and the market
(smoothies
(dollars per
variable cost total cost
quantity supplied by the 100
per
hour)
additional
smoothie)
(dollars per smoothie)
firms is 700 smoothies an
3
2.50
4.00
7.33
hour. The market quantity
demanded at $2.91 is 700
4
2.20
3.53
6.03
smoothies an hour so the
5
1.90
3.24
5.24
market price is $2.91.
6
2.00
3.00
4.67
7
8
9
2.91
4.25
8.00
2.91
3.00
3.33
4.34
4.25
4.44
PERFECT COMPETITION
203
d. What is the economic profit made or economic loss incurred by each firm?
Each firm incurs an economic loss. Each firm produces 7 smoothies at an average total cost of $4.34 a
smoothie. The firm sells the 7 smoothies for $2.91 each. The firm incurs a loss on each smoothie of $1.43
and incurs a total economic loss of $10.01 an hour.
f.
What is the market price and the equilibrium quantity in the long run?
In the long run, the price equals the minimum average total cost, which is $4.25 a smoothie. At this price,
the quantity demanded is 550 smoothies an hour, so the equilibrium quantity is 550 smoothies an hour.
11.
b. Why does each of these gas stations have so little control over the price of the gasoline they
sell?
These stations face a large amount of competition, not only from each other but also from all nearby gas
stations. If a firm raises its price it loses a vast number of customers so each firm is severely limited in
raising its price. And there is no need for a firm to lower its price much below the going price because the
firm can already increase its sales drastically with only a slight lowering of its price.
c. How do these gas stations decide how much gasoline to make available for sale?
A gas station will sell the amount of gasoline that maximizes its profit. To do so the firm will sell the
quantity that sets its MR from selling another gallon of gasoline equal to the MC of selling another gallon.
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b. Profit-maximizing output.
Quick Copys profit-maximizing quantity is 80 pages
an hour. Quick Copy maximizes its profit by
producing the quantity at which marginal revenue
equals marginal cost. In perfect competition, marginal
revenue equals price, which is 10 cents a page.
Marginal cost is 10 cents a page when Quick Copy
produces 80 pages an hour.
c. Economic profit.
Quick Copys economic profit is $2.40 an hour.
Economic profit equals total revenue minus total cost.
Total revenue equals $8.00 an hour (10 cents a page multiplied by 80 pages). The average total cost of
producing 80 pages is 7 cents a page, so total cost equals $5.60 an hour (7 cents multiplied by 80 pages).
So economic profit equals $8.00 minus $5.60, which is $2.40 an hour.
13.
b. Under what conditions would this shutdown decision maximize Delta Truss economic profit
(or minimize its loss)?
Delta Truss will shut down its plant when the price of a truss is less than its average variable cost, that is,
when P < AVC. By shutting down, Delta Truss incurs an economic loss equal to its total fixed cost, which
is the minimum loss that it can incur.
d. Under what conditions will Delta Truss make the shutdown permanent and exit the market?
Delta Truss will permanently shutdown and exit the market in the long run if the price of a truss is less
than Delta Truss average total cost.
14.
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205
continues to evolve, we believe this transition is the best way for Exxon Mobil to compete and
grow in the future, said Ben Soraci, the director of Exxon Mobils U.S. retail sales. Exxon
Mobil is not alone among Big Oil exiting the retail gas business, a market where profits have
gotten tougher as crude oil prices have risen. Station owners say theyre struggling to turn a
profit on gas because while wholesale gasoline prices have risen sharply, theyve been
unable to raise pump prices fast enough to keep pace.
Houston Chronicle, June 12, 2008
a. Is Exxon Mobil making a shutdown or exit decision in the retail gasoline market?
Exxon Mobil is making an exit decision. It is permanently leaving the market.
b. Under what conditions will this decision maximize Exxon Mobils economic profit?
This decision maximizes Exxon Mobils economic profit if Exxon Mobils retail gasoline operation is
incurring an economic loss. In this case by closing its retail gasoline stations, Exxon Mobil increases its
economic profit.
c. How might this decision by Exxon Mobil affect the economic profit made by other firms that
sell retail gasoline?
Exxon Mobils exit will decrease the number of retail firms selling gasoline. The decrease in the number of
firms decreases the supply and raises the market price of retail gasoline. As a result of the higher market
price the surviving firms profits rise.
15.
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b. Even if Blu-ray prices do drop to $90 in the long-run, why might the red-laser HD VMP still
end up being less expensive at that time?
Quite likely there will be technological advances in the red-laser player which decrease its costs of
production, increase its market supply, and lower its price. Additionally if there are only a few firms
initially producing the red-laser player and these firms are making an economic profit, entry of new firms
will increase market supply and also lower the price of a red-laser HD VMP.
16.
Figures 12.7 shows the short-run outcome. Figure 12.7a shows the market equilibrium. In the market,
demand increases and the demand curve shifts rightward from D0 to D1. In the short run the supply curve
remains S0. As a result of the increase in demand the market price rises to $125 a cell phone and the
market quantity increases to 1,200 million. Figure 12.7b shows the situation at a representative firm. The
rise in the market price raises the firms demand and marginal revenue curve from MR0 to MR1. The firm
PERFECT COMPETITION
207
responds by increasing the quantity it produces from 200 million cell phones a year to 225 million cell
phones a year. It makes an economic profit because the price exceeds the firms average total cost.
c. Explain the effects of the global increase in demand for cell phones on the market for cell
phones in the long run.
In the long run the economic profit attracts entry into the market. The market supply increases which
drives the price down. The market equilibrium quantity increases. The fall in the price decreases and, in
the long run, totally eliminates the firms economic profit. If the industry is a constant cost industry, the
price returns to its initial level and the firms amount of production returns to the initial amount.
d. What factors will determine whether the price of cell phones will rise, fall, or stay the same
in the new long-run equilibrium?
The presence or absence of external economies or diseconomies determines whether the price of a cell
phone falls, rises, or stays the same in the new long-run equilibrium. If the industry is characterized by
external economies, factors beyond the control of an individual firm that lower the firms costs as the
market output increases, the long-run equilibrium price falls. If the industry is characterized by external
diseconomies, factors beyond the control of an individual firm that raise the firms costs as the market
output increases, the long-run equilibrium price rises. If the industry has neither external economies nor
diseconomies, the long-run equilibrium price is the same as the initial equilibrium price.
17.
Study Reading Between the Lines about the market for long-distance air travel on pp. 292
293, and then answer the following questions.
a. What are the features of the market for air travel that make it highly competitive?
The market for air travel is competitive because there are many airlines providing these services and there is
no barriers to entry into the market. In addition, the service provided by all long-distance airlines is
essentially the same.
b. Explain how the market for long-distance discount air travel will get back to a long-run
equilibrium if the price of jet fuel falls to $70 a barrel.
If the market demand remains constant, airlines will break even when jet fuel is $70 a barrel. The market
price of a flight will not change, but as jet fuel becomes cheaper, each firms marginal cost and average total
cost will decrease and airlines remaining in the market will break even.
c. Draw a graph of the cost and revenue curves of an airline to illustrate the situation in the
new long-run equilibrium.
If the market demand remains constant when jet fuel remains above $70 a barrel, airlines will incur
economic losses. In the long run, some airlines will exit the market. As they exit, the market supply
decreases and the market price rises. Firms remaining in the industry will incur small losses. But in longrun equilibrium, the market will have risen to the point that firms remaining in the market break even.
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d. Explain how the market for long-distance air travel gets back to a long-run equilibrium.
Figure 12.8 illustrates. Initially, the price is $200 a seat and airlines are making zero economic profit. The
price of jet fuel rises and the airlines cost curves shift upward in 12.8(b). The airlines incur economic
losses. As some exit the market, the market supply curve shifts leftward. As it does the market price rises
and the losses incurred by the airlines remaining in the market get smaller. Airlines will continue to exit the
market until the remaining firms break even.
e. Draw a graph of the cost and revenue curves of an airline to illustrates the situation in the
long-run equilibrium in d.