Ch. 6 Sellers and Incentives
A perfectly competitive firm will choose to shut down when the ________ intersects the marginal cost curve below the _______.
price (marginal revenue); average variable cost curve
average fixed cost
total fixed cost divided by the total output
average variable cost equals...
total variable cost divided by the quantity of output
Average variable cost
total variable cost divided by the total output
the equilibrium price is the
long-run average total cost of the last entrant into the market
Price elasticity of supply
How responsive producers are to changes in the market price
3 problems a seller has to solve in order to maximize profit
1. How to make the product 2. What is the cost of making the product? 3. How much can the seller get for the product in the market?
Elasticity of supply will be greater:
-the more inventory the firm has -the more easily the firm can hire workers -the longer the time horizon
Conditions of a perfectly competitive market:
1. No buyer/seller in the market is big enough to influence the market price (so many consumers and producers that no one can change the market price with his/her behavior) 2. Sellers in market produce identical goods (an individual seller can't influence the market price due to selling a unique product), same products should have same price 3. Free entry and exit in the market (sellers can respond to potential profits in a market by entering, or can leave markets that are no longer profitable—both of which have implications on market price)
Options during shut down
1. Stay open (costs you pay= fixed + variable) 2. Close (costs you pay= fixed)
Supply curve represents
A willingness to sell a good/service at various price levels
Constant returns to scale
ATC does not change as output increases (if inputs double, output doubles because of gains from specialization)
Economies of scale
ATC falls as output increases (if inputs double, output more than doubles because large set-up costs and worker specialization)
Diseconomies of scale
ATC increases as output increases (if inputs double, output increases by less than double because top heavy—too much management)
Revenue
Amount of money the firm brings in from the sale of its product (TR= Price x Quantity sold), firm has control over the quantity
Firm
Any business entity that produces and sells goods or services
Average total cost
total cost divided by the total output
Marginal product can be negative because
Capital is fixed in the short run; if more and more workers keep getting added, they will get in each other's way and cause output to fall
How to change output in long run
Change all resources
How to change output in short run
Change labor (costs are fixed)
Fixed cost
Cost of fixed factors of production, which a firm must pay even if it produces zero output; fixed costs do not change as output changes
Variable cost
Cost of variable factors of production, which change along with a firm's output
Producer surplus
Difference b/w price the firm would be willing to except and the market price; diff. b/w market price and supply curve or marginal cost curve
Sellers ____ and _____ markets based on profit opportunities
Enter; exit
Law of diminishing returns
Eventually, marginal product falls; at some point, each additional worker contributes less output than the worker before; states that successive increases in inputs eventually lead to less additional output
Variable factor of production
Inputs that can be changed in a certain period of time and that change if the level of output changes
Fixed factor of production
Inputs that cannot be changed in the short-run and that stay the same, regardless of how much output is produced
How would the introduction of legal or technical barriers to entry affect the long-run equilibrium in a perfectly competitive market?
It would reduce any downward pressure on prices from entry and allow economic profits in the long run.
in order for a firm to maximize profit
MR=MC (P=MR) (marginal cost has to equal price)
Specialization
Marginal product increases with the first workers; workers are more efficient when they work together to produce a good; result of workers developing a certain skill set in order to increase total productivity
Goal of the seller
Maximize profit
Long run
Period of time where all of the firm's inputs can be changed; planning period; firms can enter or exit an industry
Short run
Period of time where only some of the firm's inputs can be varied
Seller's problem (3 parts)
Production, costs, and revenues
Total revenue= Total costs= Profit=
TR= P x Q TC= ATC x Q Profit= (P x Q)-(ATC x Q)= (P-ATC) x Q
Shut down
The decision to stop producing in the short run—occurs if price falls below AVC
Economic profit
Total revenue - total costs (explicit + implicit); opportunity cost is implicit
Accounting profit
Total revenue - total costs (explicit only)
Would a profit-maximizing firm continue to operate if the price in the market fell below its average cost of production in the short run?
Yes, but only if price stayed above average variable cost.
Is it possible for accounting profit to be positive and economic profit to be negative?
Yes, this could occur if explicit costs were modest and implicit costs were high.
As ATC curve is increasing, the MC is _______ the ATC curve.
above
Physical capital
any good, including machines and buildings used for production
When determining which firms enter the market at first, we look at ____________.
average total cost
As ATC curve is decreasing, the MC is _____ the ATC curve.
below
sunk costs
costs that, once committed, can never be recovered and should not affect current and future production decisions
if the market price of the product falls, producer surplus will ________ since this change results in a lower price, which means there is ______ area between the supply curve and the market price for the good.
decrease; less
when some sellers enter a competitive market, the equilibrium price ______ and the equilibrium quantity ______
decreases; increases (supply curve shifts to right when sellers enter)
If demand shifts to left, then the last firm that entered...
receives negative economic profits, so it exits the market
Total cost
sum of variable and fixed costs
Marginal cost curve intersects the average total cost curve at...
the average total cost curve's minimum point
Marginal product
the change in total output associated with using one more unit of input
In the LONG run, the supply curve for a perfectly competitive firm is represented by...
the portion of marginal cost curve above average TOTAL cost
the SHORT-run supply curve for a perfectly competitive firm is represented by...
the portion of the marginal cost curve above average VARIABLE cost.
the short-run supply curve for a perfectly competitive firm is represented by...
the portion of the marginal cost curve above average variable cost
Producer surplus is the difference b/w
the price consumers pay and the supply curve
Production
the process by which the transformation of inputs to outputs occurs
total variable cost equals...
total cost - total fixed cost
last firm that enters receives...
zero economic profits