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Flashcards 20
Language English
Category Macro-Economics
Level University
Created / Updated 23.12.2016 / 26.12.2016
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price-makers

The fact that the demand curves of imperfect competitors slope down has an important implication: Imperfect competitors areprice-makers notpricetakers. They must decide on the price of their product, while perfect competitors take the price as given.

Imperfect competition

Any market structure which varies from the perfectly competitve case

Monopoly

An industry in which a single seller has complete control over output and price. / In the long run, no monopoly is completely secure from attack by competitors.

Oligopoly

An industry in which a few sellers control the market, recognizing their mutual interdependence.

Monopolistic competition

An industry in which many firms compete fiercely b differentiating their products

Product differentiation

Occurs when firms in an industray try to make their products look or seem different from the products of rivals

Economies of scale

Occur when the per unit costs of production decline as output increases.

Barriers to entry

Factors that make it hard for new firms to enter an industry

Natural monopoly

Occurs when a production function displays perpetual increasing returns to scale

Patents

Allow a frim to maintain monopoly in production for a period of 17 years as a competition return to development of a new product

Franchise monopoly

A frim gets an exclusive right to provide a service, and in return the firm agrees to limit ist profits and to provide service for all customers / Governments also imposeentry restrictions on many industries. Typically, utilities, such as telephone, electricity distribution, and water, are given franchise monopolies to serve an area. In these cases, the f rm gets an exclusive right to provide a service, and in return the f rm agrees to limit its prices and provide universal service in its region even when some customers might be unprof table

Import restrictions

Entry barriers which protect domestic producers from foreign producers. / It could very well be that a single country’s market for a product is only big enough to support two or three f rms in an industry, while the world market is big enough to support a large number of f rms.

Marginal revenue

The increments in total revenue that comes when output increases by one unit. (Always half of AC curve) / Marginal revenue (MR ) is the change in revenuethat is generated by an additional unit of sales. /The f nal new concept is marginal revenue.Marginal revenue (MR ) is the change in revenue that is generated by an additional unit of sales.MR can be either positive or negative.

The marginal principle

People will maximize tehir incomes profits, or sssatisfaction by counting only the marginal costs and benefits of a decision. One of the most important lessons of economics is that you should look at the marginal costs and marginal benef ts of decisions and ignore past or sunk costs .

Sunk costs

Past costs that should not be considered when making a current decision.

Definition of Imperfect Competition

Imperfect competition prevails in an industrywhenever individual sellers can affect the price of theiroutput. The major kinds of imperfect competition aremonopoly, oligopoly, and monopolistic competition.

PROFIT-MAXIMIZING CONDITIONS

The maximum-prof t price (P *) and quantity(q *) of a monopolist come where the f rm’s marginalrevenue equals its marginal cost:MR = MC, at the maximum-prof t P* and q*

key points

1. Marginal revenue (MR ) is the change in revenuethat is generated by an additional unit of sales. 2. Price = average revenue (P =AR ). / 3. With downward-sloping demand, PMR = Preduced revenue on all previous units. 4. Marginal revenue is positive when demand iselastic, zero when demand is unit-elastic, andnegative when demand is inelastic. 5. For perfect competitors,P =MR =AR

MR for a perfect competitor

Under perfect competition, price equalsaverage revenue equals marginal revenue (P =AR =MR ). A perfect competitor’sdd curve anditsMR curve coincide as horizontal lines.

MR = P = MC for a perfect competitor

.Because a perfect competitor can sell all itwants at the market price,MR =P =MC at themaximum-prof t level of output