ECON Chp 8 Quiz
A perfectly competitive firm's supply curve is:
its marginal cost curve.
If the market price is above average total cost in the short run:
Correct the firm is making an economic profit.
Which of the following are not equal to a firm's profit under perfect competition?
MR - MC
In a perfectly competitive increasing-cost industry, the long-run market supply curve is
Upward-sloping.
In perfect competition, the prices charged by firms:
are determined by market supply and demand
Economic rent is:
equal to zero for the firm that has the highest cost.
The biggest difference between perfectly competitive markets and monopolistically competitive markets is that:
firms' products are differentiated under monopolistic competition but are identical under perfect competition.
If the market price is below minimum average variable cost in the short run:
he firm will shut down production.
In a perfectly competitive constant-cost industry, the long-run market supply curve is:
perfectly elastic.
In perfectly competitive markets, demand for an individual firm's product is:
perfectly elastic.
In perfectly competitive markets:
price equals marginal revenue at all quantities
If a perfectly competitive firm is making a loss in the short run, it should:
produce where price equals marginal cost so long as the price is higher than minimum average variable cost
The curve that is most relevant to whether a firm makes a profit or loss in the short run is`
the average total cost curve.
The curve that is most relevant to the firm's decision to produce or shut down in the short run is:
the average variable cost curve.
In long-run equilibrium under perfect competition, price is not equal to:
the firms' minimum average fixed cost. See Section 8.4.
A perfectly competitive industry begins in long-run equilibrium, but a technological innovation lowers the firms' costs. After the market adjusts, relative to the original equilibrium:
the price charged by the firms decreases, the quantity produced by a firm increases, and the market quantity increases.
A perfectly competitive constant-cost industry begins in long-run equilibrium, but demand subsequently decreases. After the market readjusts, relative to the original equilibrium:
the price charged by the firms remains the same, the quantity produced by a firm remains the same, and the market quantity decreases.
In the long run under perfect competition, if price is initially above average total cost:
the quantity produced by the firm and the price it charges will both fall.
In the long run under perfect competition, if price is initially below average total cost:
the quantity produced by the firm and the price it charges will both rise
In the short run, a perfectly competitive firm's producer surplus is equal to:
total revenue minus variable cost