Principles of Microeconomics Test 3
if the public utility commission allows a water company to earn a normal profit, then it is enforcing an _____ rule
average cost pricing
barriers to entry
business practices or conditions that make it difficult for new firms to enter the market
market structure analysis
by observing a few industry characteristics, we can predict pricing and output behavior
economies of scale
factors that cause a producer's average cost per unit to fall as output rises occur when firms must incur large fixed costs
perfect competition: short run
firm faces a perfectly *elastic* demand curve for its product - If a firm tried to sell above this set price then it will sell nothing as buyers know the market price and no there is no quality difference - Firms can sell as much output as it likes at that price - so there is no incentive to set a price lower the short run *marginal cost curve* represents the firms' short run *supply curve* = It shows the quantity of output that the firm would supply at any given price - The SRSC is the MC curve above the point where it cuts AVC
perfect competition: long run
in the long run firms are attracted into the industry if the incumbent firms are making supernormal profits this is because there are no barriers to entry and because there is perfect knowledge the effect of this entry into the industry is to shift the industry supply curve to the right, which drives down price until the point where all super-normal profits are exhausted if firms are making losses, they will leave the market as there are no exit barriers, and this will shift the industry supply to the left, which raises price and enables those left in the market to derive normal profits
three forms of price discrimination
perfect (first-degree), second-degree, third-degree
when firm x sells 3 units of product z, its marginal revenue is $4.67. when it sells 100 units, marginal revenue is $4.67. the firm most likely operates in which market structure?
perfect competition
types of market structure
perfect competition, monopolistic competition, oligopoly, monopoly
the demand curve for an individual perfectly competitive firm is
perfectly elastic
productive and allocative efficiency
when profit-maximizing firms in perfectly competitive markets combine with utility-maximizing consumers, the resulting quantities of outputs of goods and services demonstrate both
this BEST describes second-degree price discrimination:
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market power
the ability of a single economic actor (or small group of actors) to have a substantial influence on market prices
marginal revenue
the additional income from selling one more unit of a good; sometimes equal to price
x-ineffieciency
the divergence of a firm's observed behavior in practice, influenced by a lack of competitive pressure, from efficient behavior assumed or implied by economic theory
price taker
a buyer or seller that is unable to affect the market price
kinked demand curve
a perceived demand curve that arises when competing oligopoly firms commit to match price cuts, but not price increases
product differentiation
a positioning strategy that some firms use to distinguish their products from those of competitors
profit-maximizing rule
all firms maximize profit by producing where MR = MC when price (MR) > MC, the firm should increase production when price (MR) < MC, the firm should decrease production
when regulative a natural monopoly, average cost pricing is more effectively used than marginal cost pricing because average cost pricing
allows the firm to earn a normal rate of return on investment, while marginal cost pricing will lead to economic losses
herfindahl-hirschman index (HHI)
an index of market concentration found by summing the square of percentage shares of firms in the market
if a perfectly competitive firm earns zero economic profit, it
can expect to see about the same amount of competition in the future
when oligopolies act jointly as a monopoly, they are acting as a
cartel
ways to overcome the prisoner's dilemma
collusion, repeated games
for a perfectly competitive industry, all of this are true in the long run
consumer surplus is maximized the industry achieves productive efficiency the industry achieves allocative efficiency NOT: firms earn positive economic profit
second-degree price discrimination occurs when
consumers are charged one price for the first bundle of purchases and a different price for the next bundle of purchases
types of barrier to entry
control over a significant fact of production, economies of scale, government protection
an important difference between perfect competition and a monopoly is that a monopoly
faces a downward-sloping demand curve, while the perfect competitor faces a horizontal demand curve
sequential-move games
games in which players make moves one at a time, allowing players to view the progression of the game and to make decisions based on previous moves
monopolistic competition is like perfect completion in that they both
have numerous competitors
two different markets each have many buyers and many sellers, none of which have market power. what would be MOST helpful in determining whether each market is monopolistically competitive or perfectly competitive?
information on the degree of product differentiation in each market
the prisoner's dilemma has these characteristics
it is a noncooperative game there is no communication between players there will be inferior results for both players NOT: it is a sequential game
antitrust law
legislation to prevent new monopolies from forming and police those that already exist
because the market demand curve slopes down and to the right, the monopolist's marginal revenue will always be
less than the market price
types of product differentiation
location, quality, style, design, features, advertisting
contestable market
looks like a monopoly but does not act like one because of the threat of entry keeps prices low small airlines that serve unique routes still offer low prices if they fear entry by larger airlines
contestable markets
markets in which entry and exit are easy enough to hold prices to a competitive level even if no entry actually occurs
price caps
maximum price at which a regulated firm can sell its product they are often flexible enough to allow for changing cost conditions
a market situation in which large numbers of firms produce similar but not identical products is
monopolistic competition
it is easy to enter into and exit from which industrial structure?
monopolistic competition
each oligopolistic firm recognizes that it must take into account the behavior of its competitors when it makes pricing decisions. this recognition is called
mutual interdependence
what is a characteristic of an oligopoly market structure?
mutual interdependence
shutdown profit
occurs if average revenue is below average variable cost at the profit-maximizing positive level of output by not producing, the firm loses only the fixed costs
control over a significant factor of production
occurs when a company owns a significant share of its key ingredient or input in production
government protection
patents and copyrights that provide an exclusive right to sell a product
simultaneous-move games
players pick their actions at the same time
components of a game
players, strategies, payoffs, information, outcomes
which are part of a basic setup to a "game"?
players, the outcome, strategies NOT: a judge
second-degree price discrimination
practice of charging different prices per unit for different quantities of the same good or service
third-degree price discrimination
practice of dividing consumers into two or more groups with separate demand curves and charging different prices to each group
in this long run, which statement is TRUE for a monopolistically competitive firm?
price equals average total cost, and MR=MC
which statement is TRUE?
price is greater than marginal cost
perfect competition: profit maximization
P=MR=MC
barriers to entry allow
some monopolists to earn economic profits in the long run
which statements about marginal revenue (MR) are true?
MR is the change in total revenue divided by the change in quantity sold. in a perfectly competitive market, MR equals the market price. MR helps to determine the profit-maximizing output for a firm. NOT: MR is the total revenue divided by the quantity sold
characteristics typical of monopolistic competition
product differentiation, easy exit from the market, easy entry into the market NOT: one seller
when firms collude, they are looking to operate as a monopoly by
raising prices and reducing output in the market
collusion
secret agreement or cooperation, illegal in most cases
firm entry and exit
short-run profits and losses are eliminated in the long run short-run profits encourage new firms to enter, shifting industry supply to the right and decreasing the price until profits return to zero short-run losses encourage inefficient firms to exist, shifting industry supply to the left and increase the price until losses are eliminated
long-run industry supply curve
shows how the quantity supplied responds to the price once producers have had time to enter or exit the industry
market structure
the nature and degree of competition among firms operating in the same industry
concentration ratio
the share of industry output in sales or employment accounted for by the top firms
game theory
the study of how people behave in strategic situations
economic profit
total revenue minus total cost, including both explicit and implicit costs
short term supply curve for a competitive firm
when P < AVC: the firm shuts down immediately when AVC < P <ATC: the firm operates in the short run to minimize loses but exists the industry in the long run when P > ATC: the firm is earning economic profit
perfect (first-degree) price discrimination
when a seller charges each consumer the maximum price he/she is willing to pay; does not charge a single price in this case, monopolist captures all of the consumer surplus so CS=0
5 steps to maximizing profits in a competitive markets
1. find MR=MC 2. find optimal quantity where MR=MC 3. find optimal price (already given) 4. find the average total cost at the optimal Q 5. find the profit (P-ATC) * Q
five steps to maximizing profit for a monopolist
1. find MR=MC 2. find optimal quantity where MR=MC 3. find optimal price associated with the optimal quantity as determined by the demand curve 4. find average total cost math e optimal Q 5. find the profit (P-ATC) * Q
conditions for price discrimination to work best
1. firm must have market power (cannot be a price taker) 2. market can be segmented into different consumer groups 3. seller must be able to prevent arbitrage
Nash equilibrium
a situation in which economic actors interacting with one another each choose their best strategy given the strategies that all the other actors have chosen
dominant strategy
a strategy that is best for a player in a game regardless of the strategies chosen by the other players
short-run supply curve
a supply curve that shows the quantity of a product a firm in a purely competitive industry will offer to sell at various prices in the short run; the portion of the firm's short-run marginal cost curve that lies above its average-variable-cost curve
tit-for-tat strategies
a trigger strategy that rewards cooperation and punishes defections if your opponent lowers its price, you do the same if your opponent returns to a cooperative strategy, you do the same
cartel
a formal organization of producers that agree to coordinate prices and production
monopoly
a market in which there are many buyers but only one seller
oligopoly
a market structure in which a few large firms dominate a market
perfect competition
a market structure in which a large number of firms all produce the same product
monopolistic competition
a market structure in which many companies sell products that are similar but not identical
natural monopoly
a market that runs most efficiently when one large firm supplies all of the output
monopoly vs perfect competition
a monopoly produces a smaller quantity, charges a higher price, and earns profits in long-run equilibrium, unlike firms in perfect competition
prisoner's dilemma
a particular "game" between two captured prisoners that illustrates why cooperation is difficult to maintain even when it is mutually beneficial
rate of return regulation
a regulation that sets the price at a level that enables a firm to earn a specified target rate of return on its capital
average cost pricing rule
a rule that sets price equal to average total cost to enable a regulated firm to avoid economic loss
marginal cost pricing rule
a rule that sets price equal to marginal cost to achieve an efficient output
repeated games
a series of simultaneous games among the same set of economic actors
mutual interdependence
a shared sense that individuals or groups need each other in order to achieve common goals
the short-run supply curve for the perfectly competitive firm is the portion of the MC curve that lies
above the AVC curve
trigger strategies
action is taken contingent on your opponent's past decisions
rent seeking
activities undertaken by individuals or firms to influence public policy in a way that will increase their incomes
decreasing cost industry
an industry in which expansion through the entry of firms lowers the prices that firms in the industry must pay for resources and therefore decreases their production costs
constant cost industry
an industry that can expand or contract without affecting the long run per-unit cost of production; the long-run industry supply curve is horizontal
increasing cost industry
an industry that faces higher per-unit production costs as industry output expands in the long run; the long run industry supply curve slopes upward
a prisoner's dilemma describes a Nash equilibrium where
an outcome exists that is better for both players
characteristics of a monopolistically competitive industry
large number of firms, each with insignificant market share little to no barriers to entry and exit products sold but firms are similar but differentiated limited market power and ability to set prices
normal profit
the accounting profit earned when all resources earn their opportunity cost
price discrimination
the business practice of selling the same good at different prices to different customers