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Study Notes: Perfectly Competitive Markets in Macroeconomics

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Tailored notes based on your materials, expanded with key definitions, examples, and context.

Perfectly Competitive Markets

Introduction to Perfect Competition

Perfect competition is a market structure characterized by many sellers offering identical products, with no single firm able to influence the market price. This structure is considered the benchmark for economic efficiency and is used as a reference point for analyzing other market types.

  • Number of Sellers: Many

  • Product Difference: None. All products in this market are identical.

  • Ability to Affect Price: None. Firms are price takers.

Key Features of Perfect Competition

  • Many Firms: A large number of firms compete in the market.

  • Identical Products: No differentiation between products.

  • Free Entry and Exit: Firms can enter or leave the market freely in the long run.

  • No Market Power: Individual firms cannot influence market price.

  • Allocative and Productive Efficiency: Achieved in the long run.

Profit Maximization in Perfect Competition

Like all profit-maximizing firms, perfectly competitive firms produce the quantity where marginal revenue equals marginal cost.

  • Profit Maximizing Rule: Produce where

  • Price as Demand: The firm's demand curve is perfectly elastic at the market price.

  • Shutdown Point: Temporarily shut down when price falls below average variable cost () at the profit-maximizing quantity.

  • Profit/Loss: Determined by the gap between average total cost () and the firm's demand curve at the profit-maximizing quantity.

Key Equation:

  • Profit/Loss at

Market vs. Firm Graphs

Market graphs show the intersection of supply and demand, determining the equilibrium price and quantity. Firm graphs show cost curves and profit-maximizing output.

  • Market: Supply & Demand curves

  • Firm: , , , curves

  • Equilibrium price (): Horizontal demand curve at

  • Equilibrium quantity (): Firm produces where

Example: The market price is ; the firm produces where at that price.

Barriers to Entry

Barriers to entry are obstacles that make it difficult for new firms to enter a market. Perfect competition assumes no or low barriers to entry, allowing free entry and exit in the long run.

  • Short Run: Number of firms is fixed.

  • Long Run: Firms can enter or exit, driving economic profit to zero.

Short-Run and Long-Run Profit

  • Short-Run Profit: Occurs if ; firms can earn profits or losses.

  • Short-Run Loss: Occurs if ; firms can operate at a loss or shut down.

  • Long-Run Profit: Not possible due to free entry/exit; economic profit is zero.

Allocative and Productive Efficiency

  • Allocative Efficiency: Price equals marginal cost () in both the short and long run.

  • Productive Efficiency: Firms produce at the minimum point of the average total cost curve ().

Firm's Supply Curve

The supply curve for the firm is the portion of its marginal cost curve above the average variable cost ().

  • Supply Curve: Above

  • Shutdown Point: Minimum point of

Example: If market price falls below , the firm will shut down in the short run.

Total Revenue and Total Cost in Perfect Competition

Profit-maximizing firms produce where total revenue minus total cost is greatest. An alternative approach is to compare total revenue and total cost at each output level.

  • Total Revenue ():

  • Total Cost (): Sum of all costs at each output level

  • Profit:

Graphically, profit is maximized where the vertical distance between and is greatest.

Market Long-Run Supply Curve

The market supply curve can be horizontal (constant cost industry), upward sloping (increasing cost industry), or downward sloping (decreasing cost industry).

  • Constant Cost Industry: Entry/exit does not affect input prices or cost curves.

  • Increasing Cost Industry: Entry increases input prices, shifting cost curves upward.

  • Decreasing Cost Industry: Entry lowers input prices, shifting cost curves downward.

Increasing and Decreasing Cost Industries

In an increasing cost industry, the long-run average total cost curve slopes upward due to rising input prices as industry expands. In a decreasing cost industry, the curve slopes downward due to economies of scale or falling input prices.

Industry Type

Long-Run ATC Curve

Example

Increasing Cost

Upward sloping

Precious metals (mining)

Decreasing Cost

Downward sloping

Microchips (economies of scale)

Constant Cost

Horizontal

Basic agricultural products

Summary Table: Key Features of Perfect Competition

Feature

Description

Number of Firms

Many

Product Type

Identical

Entry/Exit

Free in the long run

Market Power

None (price takers)

Efficiency

Allocative and productive in the long run

Additional info:

  • Perfect competition is a theoretical benchmark; real-world markets may approximate but rarely achieve all its conditions.

  • Graphs and equations are essential for understanding firm and market behavior in perfect competition.

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