Diseconomies of Scale/ Perfect Competition
Golden Rule of Profit Maximization:
To maximize profit or minimize loss, a firm should produce the quantity at which marginal revenue equals marginal cost; this rule holds for all market structures.
Average Revenue:
Total revenue divided by output, or AR=TR/q; in all market structures, average revenue equals the market price.
Isoquant Curve:
A curve that shows all the technologically efficient combinations of two resources, such as labor and capital, that produce a certain rate of output.
Diseconomies of Scale:
Forces that may eventually increase a firm's average cost as the scale of operation increases in the long run. [At the Movies]
Isocost Line:
Identifies all combinations of capital and labor the firm can hire for a given total cost.
Expansion Path:
The Line formed by connecting tangency points. P 164. Isoquants
Properties of Isoquants:
1. Isoquants father from the origin represent greater output rates. 2. Isoquants have negative slopes because along a given Isoquant, the quantity of labor employed inversely relates to the quantity of capital employed. 3. Isoquants do not intersect because each isoquant refers to a specific rate of output. 4. Isoquants are usually convex to the origin.
Constant Long-Run Average Cost
A cost that occurs when, over some range of output, long run average cost neither increases nor decreases with changes in firm size. [Billions and Billions of Burgers] (McRib, at McDonalds is only a special in Cincy but Constant in the south throughout the year)
Short-Run Industry Supply Curve:
A curve that indicates the quantity supplied by the industry at each price in the short run; in perfect competition, the horizontal sum of each firm's short-run supply curve.
Short-Run Firm Supply Curve:
A curve that shows the quantity a firm supplies at each price in the short run; in perfect competition, that portion of a firm's marginal cost curve that intersects and rises above the low point on its average variable cost curve.
Long-Run Industry Supply Curve:
A curve that shows the relationship between price and quantity supplied by the industry once firms adjust fully to any change in market demand.
Price Taker:
A firm that aces a given market price and whose quantity supplied has no effect on that price; a perfectly competitive firm.
Perfect Competition:
A market structure with many fully informed buyers and sellers of a standardized product and no obstacles to entry or exit of firms in the long run.
Commodity:
A standardized product, a product that does not differ across producers, such as bushels of wheat or an ounce of gold.
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.
Isoquant Lines
All combinations of capital and labor a firm can hire for a given total cost Are parallel - reflect the same relative resource prices
Increasing-Cost Industry:
An increasing that faces higher per-unit production. Costs as industry output expands in the long run; the long run industry supply curve slopes upward.
Expansion path
Connect the tangency points between isoquants and isocost lines Least-cost input combinations for producing several output rates
Production Function:
Identifies the maximum quantities of a particular good or service that can be produced per time period with various combinations of resources, for a given level of technology. [The PF can be presented as an equation, a graph, or a table]
Market Structure
Important features of a market, such as the number of firms, product uniformity across firms, firms' ease of entry and exit, and forms of competition
Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution (MRTS):
The Rate at which labor substitutes for capital without affecting output.
Marginal Revenue:
The change in total revenue from selling an additional unit; in perfect competition, marginal revenue is also the market price.