BackMicroeconomics Study Notes: Market Efficiency, Government Actions, Costs, Perfect Competition, and Monopoly
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Market Efficiency
Competitive Markets and Efficiency
Competitive markets are considered efficient because they allocate resources in a way that maximizes total surplus (the sum of consumer and producer surplus). In such markets, goods are produced at the lowest possible cost and distributed to those who value them most highly.
Efficiency: Occurs when it is impossible to make someone better off without making someone else worse off (Pareto efficiency).
Consumer Surplus: The difference between what consumers are willing to pay and what they actually pay.
Producer Surplus: The difference between the price producers receive and the minimum they are willing to accept.
Total Surplus: The sum of consumer and producer surplus; maximized in competitive equilibrium.
Example: In a perfectly competitive market for wheat, the equilibrium price and quantity maximize total surplus.
Government Actions in Markets
Price Ceilings and Price Floors
Government interventions such as price ceilings and price floors can disrupt market efficiency, leading to shortages, surpluses, and deadweight losses.
Price Ceiling: A legal maximum price (e.g., rent control). If set below equilibrium, it causes shortages.
Price Floor: A legal minimum price (e.g., minimum wage). If set above equilibrium, it causes surpluses.
Deadweight Loss: The reduction in total surplus that results from market distortion, such as a price ceiling or floor.
Example: Rent control in a city leads to a shortage of apartments and deadweight loss.
Formula for Deadweight Loss:
Output and Costs
Production and the Law of Diminishing Returns
The law of diminishing returns states that as more of a variable input (like labor) is added to a fixed input (like capital), the additional output from each new unit of input eventually decreases.
Marginal Product: The additional output produced by one more unit of input.
Example: Adding more workers to a factory increases output, but after a certain point, each additional worker contributes less.
Cost Concepts
Total Cost (TC): The sum of all costs incurred in production.
Average Cost (AC): Total cost divided by the quantity produced.
Marginal Cost (MC): The increase in total cost from producing one more unit.
Key Formulas:
Short Run vs. Long Run Costs
Short Run: At least one input is fixed; firms face diminishing returns.
Long Run: All inputs are variable; firms can adjust all factors of production.
Example: In the short run, a bakery cannot expand its building, but in the long run, it can build a larger facility.
Perfect Competition
Characteristics and Firm Behavior
Perfect competition describes a market with many firms selling identical products, where each firm is a price taker.
Price Taker: A firm that cannot influence the market price and must accept it as given.
Profit Maximization: Firms maximize profit where price equals marginal cost ().
Shut Down Point: The output level where price equals minimum average variable cost; below this, the firm should shut down in the short run.
Break-Even Point: The output level where price equals average total cost; the firm earns zero economic profit.
Short Run vs. Long Run Equilibrium: In the short run, firms can earn profits or losses; in the long run, entry and exit drive economic profit to zero.
Example: A wheat farmer sells at the market price and adjusts output so that .
Key Equations:
Monopoly
Monopoly Pricing and Output
A monopoly is a market with a single seller and high barriers to entry. The monopolist sets output where marginal revenue equals marginal cost, but price exceeds marginal cost.
Monopoly Output: Determined by .
Price: Set above marginal cost, leading to lower output and higher prices than in perfect competition.
Inefficiency: Monopolies create deadweight loss by producing less than the socially optimal quantity.
Need for Regulation: Governments may regulate monopolies to reduce inefficiency and protect consumers.
Natural Monopoly: Occurs when a single firm can supply the entire market at lower cost than multiple firms (e.g., utilities).
Average Cost Pricing: Regulators may require monopolies to set price equal to average cost, allowing normal profit but eliminating economic profit.
Example: A local water utility is a natural monopoly, regulated to prevent excessive pricing.
Key Equations: