Market Structures: Perfect Competition Overview

 
ECON 211
ELEMENTS OF ECONOMICS I
 
Session 6– Perfect Competition (Part 1)
 
Lecturer: Dr. (Mrs.) Nkechi S. Owoo, Department of Economics
Contact Information: nowoo@ug.edu.gh
 
Session Overview
 
This session is the first of three that analyze different market
structures. Market structure is a way of describing those
characteristics of a market that influence the behavior of
buyers and sellers when they come together to trade.
To determine market structure, we must ask how many
buyers and sellers are in the market, whether the product is
standardized, and whether there are barriers to entry.
The answers to these questions help to classify a market into
one of four basic types: perfect competition, monopoly,
monopolistic competition, or oligopoly.
This session discusses the model of perfect competition.
 
 
Slide 2
 
Session Outline
 
The key topics to be covered in the session are as follows:
What is Perfect Competition?
The Perfectly Competitive Firm
The Competitive Firms Demand Curve
The Competitive Firms Supply Curve
 
 
 
 
 
Slide 3
 
Reading List
 
Hall and Lieberman
Chapter 8, pp:219- 227
 
 
Slide 4
 
WHAT IS PERFECT COMPETITION?
 
Topic One
 
 
Slide 5
 
Firms in Competitive Markets:
Introduction
 
Market Structure
This refers to the x’tics of a market that influence how trading takes place
How do we determine structure of a particular market?
How many
 buyers and sellers are in the market?
Is each seller offering a 
standardized product?
Are there any 
barriers to entry or exit
?
Is there perfect knowledge about products?
There are four main classifications of markets
Perfect Competition
Monopoly
Monopolistic competition
Oligopoly
For this semester, we shall discuss the first 2 market structures.
 
6
 
Perfect Competition
 
Many buyers and sellers
This condition is important so that no individual decision maker can
significantly affect the price of the product
Consider the market for maize vs. athletic shoes (Nike, Adidas, New
Balance)
Maize is a good example of a perfectly competitive market
Standardized product
buyers do not perceive differences between the products  e.g. beans.
The conditions of many buyers and sellers, and the presence
of a standardized product imply that no single buyer or seller
has any control over price
Would a seller charge more than the going market price? No, because
buyers can buy the same product from another seller
Would a buyer demand a lower price? No, because sellers can sell at
the given price to other consumers
Therefore, in a perfectly competitive market, buyers and sellers are
price takers.
 
7
 
Perfect Competition
 
Sellers can easily enter/exit the market
Entry: There are no 
significant
 barriers to discourage new
entrants
Same terms of entry for all firms
Can you think of some potential barriers to entry?
Large capital requirements, taxation, consumer base, etc
Exit: Any firm can enter and exit the market at any time.
A firm should be able to sell of equipment and exit market if
making losses in the long run
Can you think of some potential barriers to exit?
Severance pay to workers, inability to sell of specialized
machinery, etc
This condition is important for long-run outcomes in
competitive markets, which we will discuss in part 3
 
8
 
Perfect Competition
 
Presence of well-informed buyers and sellers
E.g. the Market for maize is a good example
Not all markets satisfy this condition, however
Consumers who purchase ‘China’ fabrics or buy used items
e.g. cars, do not have perfect knowledge of the goods
being purchased.
 
9
 
The Perfectly Competitive Firm
 
A market is collection of individual buyers and sellers
In PC markets, individual buyers and sellers and
overall body (market) affect each other through
feedback mechanisms
Therefore, must understand how firm works
..and the competitive market in which it operates
 
10
The Competitive Firm’s Demand Curve
 
The demand curve facing the perfectly competitive firm is
horizontal– perfectly elastic - at the market price
i.e. No matter how much firm produces, will sell at the same price
Why?
Output is standardized
If firm charges even a little above competitors, will lose all
customers
Firm is a tiny producer in overall market
Firm can increase production without lowering price
Price taker
The price of its output is given
Decision
The firm’s main decision is therefore to determine how much
output to produce and sell
11
 
Demand Curves for the Firm and the
Industry
 
The demand curves facing the firm is different from
the industry demand curve.
A perfectly competitive firm’s demand schedule is
perfectly elastic even though the demand curve for
the market is downward sloping.
 
12
The Competitive Firm’s Demand Curve vs. The
Competitive Industry Demand Curve
13
 
The Competitive Industry and Firm
 
The Revenue of a Competitive Firm
 
In the perfect competitive market structure, we
assume that firms try to maximize profits
Illustration
 
14
Cost and Revenue Data for a Competitive Firm
(Market for Maize)
15
 
Profit maximization
 
Profits= TR- TC
Firm produces at point that maximizes profits as
much as possible
What then, is the profit-maximizing output level?
 
16
Cost and Revenue Data for a
Competitive Firm
17
Profit Maximization
18
 
TR
 
550
 
2,800
 
2,100
 
TC
 
Slope = 400
 Profit = TR-TC
 Maximum Profit
 per Day = 700
Profit Maximization in Perfect Competition 
(a) TR-TC
 
Profit maximization
 
Another way to look at profit-maximizing output
level
MR- MC approach
When MR > MC, increases in output increase profits
When MC > MR, increases in output reduces profits
 
19
Cost and Revenue Data for a
Competitive Firm
20
Profit Maximization
21
 
MC
 
$400
 
d = MR
Profit Maximization in Perfect Competition 
(b) MR=MC
Rules for Profit Maximization:
1.
If MR> MC, firm should increase output
2.
If MC> MR, firm should decrease output
3.
When MC= MR, profits are maximized
A
B
Profit Maximization
 
MC- MR approach
Produce where MR= MC, 
and MC crosses MR from
below!
22
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Curve
 
The firm
takes the market price as given
decides how much output to produce at that price
Profit-maximizing output level: P=MC (=MR)
As price of output changes, firm will slide along its MC
curve in deciding how much to produce
Recall a firm’s cost curves? (AVC, ATV, AFC, MC)
Graphical Illustration
23
Recap: Standard Cost Curves
24
 
MC
 
AVC
 
ATC
 
AFC
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Curve
25
 
0.50
 
1,000
 
2,000
 
4,000
 
5,000
 
7,000
 
1.00
 
2.00
 
$3.50
 
2.50
 
MC
 
ATC
 
d
1
=MR
1
 
AVC
(a)
 
Firm's 
Supply
Curve
 
0.50
 
2,000
 
4,000
 
5,000
 
7,000
 
1.00
 
2.00
 
$3.50
 
2.50
(b)
 
d
2
=MR
2
 
d
3
=MR
3
 
d
4
=MR
4
 
d
5
=MR
5
Short-Run Supply Under Perfect Competition
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Curve
 
As the price of output changes, firm will slide
along MC curve in deciding how much to produce
But what if firm is suffering a loss
A loss large enough to justify shutting down?
26
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Curve
27
 
0.50
 
1,000
 
2,000
 
4,000
 
5,000
 
7,000
 
1.00
 
2.00
 
3.50
 
2.50
 
MC
 
ATC
 
d
1
=MR
1
 
AVC
(a)
 
Firm's 
Supply
Curve
 
0.50
 
2,000
 
4,000
 
5,000
 
7,000
 
1.00
 
2.00
 
3.50
 
2.50
(b)
 
d
2
=MR
2
 
d
3
=MR
3
 
d
4
=MR
4
 
d
5
=MR
5
What if P= Ghc2?
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Curve
28
 
0.50
 
1,000
 
2,000
 
4,000
 
5,000
 
7,000
 
1.00
 
2.00
 
3.50
 
2.50
 
MC
 
ATC
 
d
1
=MR
1
 
AVC
(a)
 
Firm's 
Supply
Curve
 
0.50
 
2,000
 
4,000
 
5,000
 
7,000
 
1.00
 
2.00
 
3.50
 
2.50
(b)
 
d
2
=MR
2
 
d
3
=MR
3
 
d
4
=MR
4
 
d
5
=MR
5
What if P= Ghc0.50?
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply Curve
29
 
0.50
 
1,000
 
2,000
 
4,000
 
5,000
 
7,000
 
1.00
 
2.00
 
3.50
 
2.50
 
MC
 
ATC
 
d
1
=MR
1
 
AVC
(a)
 
Firm's 
Supply
Curve
 
0.50
 
2,000
 
4,000
 
5,000
 
7,000
 
1.00
 
2.00
 
3.50
 
2.50
(b)
 
d
2
=MR
2
 
d
3
=MR
3
 
d
4
=MR
4
 
d
5
=MR
5
What if P= Ghc1?
The Shutdown Price
 
Price at which a firm is indifferent between
producing and shutting down
If P>AVC – produce
If P<AVC – shut down
Firm’s supply curve
Is its MC curve for all prices above AVC, and a vertical line
at zero units for all prices below AVC.
30
 
The Shutdown Point
 
The firm will shut down if it cannot cover average
variable costs.
A firm should continue to produce as long as price is
greater than average variable cost. i.e. P> AVC
Once price falls below that point it makes sense to shut
down temporarily and save the variable costs.
Consider the case of Basement on campus
 
31
 
The Shutdown Point
 
The 
shutdown point
 is the point at which the firm
will gain more by shutting down than it will by
staying in business.
As long as total revenue is more than total variable
cost, temporarily producing at a loss is the firm’s best
strategy since it is taking less of a loss than it would
by shutting down.
 
32
 
References
 
Economics: Principles and Applications:
 Hall R.E. and
Lieberman M. (2008), Thomson/ South Western (4
th
Edition)
 
 
Slide 33
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This session delves into analyzing different market structures, focusing on perfect competition. It defines market structure, explores key characteristics influencing buyer-seller interactions, and outlines the model of perfect competition. The session discusses how market classification is based on factors like the number of buyers/sellers, product standardization, and barriers to entry. Essential topics covered include the nature of perfect competition, behavior of firms in competitive markets, demand and supply curves, and recommended reading materials.

  • Market Structures
  • Perfect Competition
  • Economics
  • Session Overview
  • Firms

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  1. Lecturer: Dr. (Mrs.) Nkechi S. Owoo, Department of Economics Contact Information: nowoo@ug.edu.gh College of Education School of Continuing and Distance Education 2014/2015 2016/2017

  2. Session Overview This session is the first of three that analyze different market structures. Market structure is a way of describing those characteristics of a market that influence the behavior of buyers and sellers when they come together to trade. To determine market structure, we must ask how many buyers and sellers are in the market, whether the product is standardized, and whether there are barriers to entry. The answers to these questions help to classify a market into one of four basic types: perfect competition, monopoly, monopolistic competition, or oligopoly. This session discusses the model of perfect competition. Slide 2

  3. Session Outline The key topics to be covered in the session are as follows: What is Perfect Competition? The Perfectly Competitive Firm The Competitive Firms Demand Curve The Competitive Firms Supply Curve Slide 3

  4. Reading List Hall and Lieberman Chapter 8, pp:219- 227 Slide 4

  5. Topic One WHAT IS PERFECT COMPETITION? Slide 5

  6. 6 Firms in Competitive Markets: Introduction Market Structure This refers to the x tics of a market that influence how trading takes place How do we determine structure of a particular market? How many buyers and sellers are in the market? Is each seller offering a standardized product? Are there any barriers to entry or exit? Is there perfect knowledge about products? There are four main classifications of markets Perfect Competition Monopoly Monopolistic competition Oligopoly For this semester, we shall discuss the first 2 market structures.

  7. 7 Perfect Competition Many buyers and sellers This condition is important so that no individual decision maker can significantly affect the price of the product Consider the market for maize vs. athletic shoes (Nike, Adidas, New Balance) Maize is a good example of a perfectly competitive market Standardized product buyers do not perceive differences between the products e.g. beans. The conditions of many buyers and sellers, and the presence of a standardized product imply that no single buyer or seller has any control over price Would a seller charge more than the going market price? No, because buyers can buy the same product from another seller Would a buyer demand a lower price? No, because sellers can sell at the given price to other consumers Therefore, in a perfectly competitive market, buyers and sellers are price takers.

  8. 8 Perfect Competition Sellers can easily enter/exit the market Entry: There are no significant barriers to discourage new entrants Same terms of entry for all firms Can you think of some potential barriers to entry? Large capital requirements, taxation, consumer base, etc Exit: Any firm can enter and exit the market at any time. A firm should be able to sell of equipment and exit market if making losses in the long run Can you think of some potential barriers to exit? Severance pay to workers, inability to sell of specialized machinery, etc This condition is important for long-run outcomes in competitive markets, which we will discuss in part 3

  9. 9 Perfect Competition Presence of well-informed buyers and sellers E.g. the Market for maize is a good example Not all markets satisfy this condition, however Consumers who purchase China fabrics or buy used items e.g. cars, do not have perfect knowledge of the goods being purchased.

  10. 10 The Perfectly Competitive Firm A market is collection of individual buyers and sellers In PC markets, individual buyers and sellers and overall body (market) affect each other through feedback mechanisms Therefore, must understand how firm works ..and the competitive market in which it operates

  11. 11 The Competitive Firm s Demand Curve The demand curve facing the perfectly competitive firm is horizontal perfectly elastic - at the market price i.e. No matter how much firm produces, will sell at the same price Why? Output is standardized If firm charges even a little above competitors, will lose all customers Firm is a tiny producer in overall market Firm can increase production without lowering price Price taker The price of its output is given Decision The firm s main decision is therefore to determine how much output to produce and sell

  12. 12 Demand Curves for the Firm and the Industry The demand curves facing the firm is different from the industry demand curve. A perfectly competitive firm s demand schedule is perfectly elastic even though the demand curve for the market is downward sloping.

  13. 13 The Competitive Firm s Demand Curve vs. The Competitive Industry Demand Curve The Competitive Industry and Firm 1. The intersection of the market supply and the market demand curve 3. The typical firm can sell all it wants at the market price Market Firm Price Price S $400 $400 Demand Curve Facing the Firm D Output Output 2. determines the equilibrium market price 4. so it faces a horizontal demand curve.

  14. 14 The Revenue of a Competitive Firm In the perfect competitive market structure, we assume that firms try to maximize profits Illustration

  15. 15 Cost and Revenue Data for a Competitive Firm (Market for Maize) Marginal Revenue Marginal Cost Output (bags of maize) Price per bag Total Revenue (P x Q) Average Revenue (TR/ Q) Total Cost Profit 0 400 0 550 -550 1 400 400 400 400 1000 450 -600 2 400 800 400 400 1200 200 -400 3 400 1200 400 400 1250 50 -50 4 400 1600 400 400 1350 100 250 5 400 2000 400 400 1500 150 500 6 400 2400 400 400 1750 250 650 7 400 2800 400 400 2100 350 700 8 400 3200 400 400 2550 450 650 9 400 3600 400 400 3100 550 500 10 400 4000 400 400 3750 650 250

  16. 16 Profit maximization Profits= TR- TC Firm produces at point that maximizes profits as much as possible What then, is the profit-maximizing output level?

  17. 17 Cost and Revenue Data for a Competitive Firm Output Price per ounce Total Revenue Marginal Revenue Total Cost Marginal Cost Profit 0 400 0 550 -550 1 400 400 400 1000 450 -600 2 400 800 400 1200 200 -400 3 400 1200 400 1250 50 -50 4 400 1600 400 1350 100 250 5 400 2000 400 1500 150 500 6 400 2400 400 1750 250 650 7 400 2800 400 2100 350 700 8 400 3200 400 2550 450 650 9 400 3600 400 3100 550 500 10 400 4000 400 3750 650 250

  18. 18 Profit Maximization Profit Maximization in Perfect Competition (a) TR-TC Ghc TR TC 2,800 Profit = TR-TC Maximum Profit per Day = 700 2,100 550 Slope = 400 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Bags of Maize per Day

  19. 19 Profit maximization Another way to look at profit-maximizing output level MR- MC approach When MR > MC, increases in output increase profits When MC > MR, increases in output reduces profits

  20. 20 Cost and Revenue Data for a Competitive Firm Output Price per ounce Total Revenue Marginal Revenue Total Cost Marginal Cost Profit 0 400 0 550 -550 1 400 400 400 1000 450 -600 2 400 800 400 1200 200 -400 3 400 1200 400 1250 50 -50 4 400 1600 400 1350 100 250 5 400 2000 400 1500 150 500 6 400 2400 400 1750 250 650 7 400 2800 400 2100 350 700 8 400 3200 400 2500 450 650 9 400 3600 400 3100 550 500 10 400 4000 400 3750 650 250

  21. 21 Profit Maximization Profit Maximization in Perfect Competition (b) MR=MC Dollars Profit maximization MR=MC MC B A $400 d = MR 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Bags of Maize per Day Rules for Profit Maximization: 1. If MR> MC, firm should increase output 2. If MC> MR, firm should decrease output 3. When MC= MR, profits are maximized

  22. 22 Profit Maximization MC- MR approach Produce where MR= MC, and MC crosses MR from below!

  23. 23 The Firm s Short-Run Supply Curve The firm takes the market price as given decides how much output to produce at that price Profit-maximizing output level: P=MC (=MR) As price of output changes, firm will slide along its MC curve in deciding how much to produce Recall a firm s cost curves? (AVC, ATV, AFC, MC) Graphical Illustration

  24. 24 Recap: Standard Cost Curves Ghc MC 4 3 AFC ATC 2 AVC 1 30 90 130 160 196 0 Units of Output

  25. 25 The Firm s Short-Run Supply Curve Short-Run Supply Under Perfect Competition (a) (b) Price per Bushel Dollars ATC Firm's Supply Curve MC $3.50 $3.50 d1=MR1 2.50 2.50 d2=MR2 d3=MR3 2.00 2.00 AVC 1.00 1.00 d4=MR4 d5=MR5 0.50 0.50 Bushels per Year Bushels per Year 1,000 4,000 7,000 2,000 4,000 7,000 2,000 5,000 5,000

  26. 26 The Firm s Short-Run Supply Curve As the price of output changes, firm will slide along MC curve in deciding how much to produce But what if firm is suffering a loss A loss large enough to justify shutting down?

  27. 27 The Firm s Short-Run Supply Curve What if P= Ghc2? (a) (b) Price Ghc ATC Firm's Supply Curve MC 3.50 3.50 d1=MR1 2.50 2.50 d2=MR2 d3=MR3 2.00 2.00 AVC 1.00 1.00 d4=MR4 d5=MR5 0.50 0.50 Output Output 1,000 4,000 7,000 2,000 4,000 7,000 2,000 5,000 5,000

  28. 28 The Firm s Short-Run Supply Curve What if P= Ghc0.50? (a) (b) Price Ghc ATC Firm's Supply Curve MC 3.50 3.50 d1=MR1 2.50 2.50 d2=MR2 d3=MR3 2.00 2.00 AVC 1.00 1.00 d4=MR4 d5=MR5 0.50 0.50 Output Output 1,000 4,000 7,000 2,000 4,000 7,000 2,000 5,000 5,000

  29. 29 The Firm s Short-Run Supply Curve What if P= Ghc1? (a) (b) Price Ghc ATC Firm's Supply Curve MC 3.50 3.50 d1=MR1 2.50 2.50 d2=MR2 d3=MR3 2.00 2.00 AVC 1.00 1.00 d4=MR4 d5=MR5 0.50 0.50 Output Output 1,000 4,000 7,000 2,000 4,000 7,000 2,000 5,000 5,000

  30. 30 The Shutdown Price Price at which a firm is indifferent between producing and shutting down If P>AVC produce If P<AVC shut down Firm s supply curve Is its MC curve for all prices above AVC, and a vertical line at zero units for all prices below AVC.

  31. 31 The Shutdown Point The firm will shut down if it cannot cover average variable costs. A firm should continue to produce as long as price is greater than average variable cost. i.e. P> AVC Once price falls below that point it makes sense to shut down temporarily and save the variable costs. Consider the case of Basement on campus

  32. 32 The Shutdown Point The shutdown point is the point at which the firm will gain more by shutting down than it will by staying in business. As long as total revenue is more than total variable cost, temporarily producing at a loss is the firm s best strategy since it is taking less of a loss than it would by shutting down.

  33. References Economics: Principles and Applications: Hall R.E. and Lieberman M. (2008), Thomson/ South Western (4th Edition) Slide 33

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