Economics Chapter Seven
Price-fixing
Agreement, usually illegal, by firms to charge a uniform price for a product.
Collusion
Agreements, usually illegal, among producers to fix prices, limit output, or divide markets.
Positive externality
Beneficial side effect that affects an uninvolved third party.
Nonprice Competition
Competition involving the advertising of a product's appearance, quality, or design, rather than its price.
Public goods
Economic product that is consumed collectively; highways, national defense, police and fire protection.
Externality
Economic side effect that affects an uninvolved third party.
Negative exernality
Harmful side effect that affects uninvolved third party; external cost
Economies of scale
Increasingly efficient use of personnel, plant, and equipment as a firm becomes larger.
Market Structure
Market classification according to number and size of firms, type of product, and type of competition.
Technological Monopoly
Market situation where a firm has a monopoly because it owns or controls a manufacturing method, process, or other scientific advance.
Geographic Monopoly
Market situation where a firm has a monpoly because of its location or the small size of the market.
Perfect competition
Market structure characterized by a large number of well-informed independent buyers and sellers who exhange identical products
Monopolistic competition
Market structure having all conditions of pure competition except for identical products; form of imperfect competition
market failure
Market where any of the requirements for a competitive market-adequate competition, knowledge of prices and opportunties, mobility of resources, and competitive profits-are lacking.
Natural Monopoly
Market where average costs are lowest when all output is produced by a single firm.
Government Monopoly
Monopoly created and/or owned by the government.
Laissez Faire
Philosophy that government should not interfere with business activity.
Product differentiation
Real or imagined differences between competing products in the same industry.
Public disclosure
Requirement forcing a business to reveal information about its products or its operations to the public.
Trust
illegal combination of corporations or cormpanies organized to hinder competition
price discrimination
illegal practice or charging customers different prices for the same product
Monopoly
market structure characterized by a single producer; form of imperfect condition
Oligopoly
market structure in which a few large sellers dominate and have the ability to affect prices in the industry; form of imperfect competition
Imperfect Competition
market structure where all conditions of pure competition are not met; monopolistic competition, oligopoly, and monopoly
cease and desist order
ruling requiring a company to stop an unfair business practice that reduces or limits competition