Microeconomics Chapter 12 Test Answers
What conditions make a market perfectly competitive?
A market is perfectly competitive if:
Answer: 1. Many buyers and sellers. Each individual buyer and seller is small relative to the entire market, and, as a result, cannot affect the market price.
2. All firms sell identical products. There can be no verifiable difference between the goods and services sold under perfect competition.
3. There are no barriers to entry into the market.
How should firms in perfectly competitive markets decide how much to produce?
Perfectly competitive firms should produce the quantity where
Answer: Answer: Perfectly competitive firms cannot control price and are consequently price takers. Economists assume that the objective of such firms is to maximize profit (total revenue minus total cost).
Therefore, to maximize profit, a firm should produce the quantity of output where the difference between total revenue and total cost is as large as possible.
Total revenue equals:
Answer: Price multiplied by Quantity
TR=PxQ
Average revenue equals:
Answer: Total revenue divided by the Quantity
AR=TR/Q
Marginal revenue is:
Answer: the change in total revenue from selling one more unit of a product
MR= change in TR/change in Q
Which of the following is an expression of profit for a perfectly competitive firm?
Profit for a perfectly competitive firm can be expressed as:
Answer: Profit= (P-ATC)xQ
This is because…Profit= TR-TC
Profit= (PxQ)-TC
divide all by Q
—> Profit/Q=(PQ)/Q-TC/Q
This turns into Profit/Q=P-ATC, because ATC=average total cost=TC/Q.
sooo, if you multiply it all by Q,
Profit= (P-ATC)xQ
The figure to the right represents the cost structure for a perfectly competitive firm with its average total cost (ATC) curve, average variable (AVC) curve, and marginal cost (MC) curve. Fixed costs are $50.00.
Suppose the market price is $24.00 per unit.
Characterize the firm’s profit.
If the firm produces output, then it will:
Answer: experience losses
Production decision in the short run: If the firm produces, then it will produce an output level where price equals marginal cost.
If price is greater than average total cost, then the firm will make a profit.
If price is equal to average total cost, then the firm will break even.
If price is less than average total cost, then the firm will experience losses.
Answer: If price is greater than average total cost, then the firm will make a profit.
If price is equal to average total cost, then the firm will break even.
If price is less than average total cost, then the firm will experience losses.
Shut-down point in the short run: In the short run, if price is greater than average variable cost, then the firm should:
However, if price is less than average variable cost:
Answer: continue to produce (because the firm would lose an amount less than fixed costs by shutting down).
the firm should stop production by shutting down.
Break-even point:
Answer: A firm is breaking even when its total cost equals its total revenue.
Economic profit:
Answer: A firm’s revenues minus all its costs, implicit and explicit.
Since accounting profit generally only includes explicit costs:
Answer: breaking even corresponds to positive accounting profit.
When breaking even, the wheat farmer should continue to produce in the long run because this is as high a return as she could earn elsewhere.
Because economic profit takes into account all of the wheat farmer’s costs, she should continue to produce because she can cover all her implicit opportunity costs.
Entry and exit decisions in the long run:
Answer: If P > ATC, then new firms will enter the market. If new firms enter, then the market supply curve will shift to the right(increase) and decrease the market price.
If P < ATC, then existing firms will exit. If existing firms exit, then the market supply curve will shift to the left(decrease), and increase the market price.
What determines entry and exit of firms in a perfectly competitive industry in the long run?
In a perfectly competitive industry in the long run,
Answer: new firms will enter if existing firms are making a profit and existing firms will exit if they are experiencing losses.
Entry and exit decisions: Profits and losses provide signals to firms that lead to entry and exit in the long run.
For example, unless a firm can cover all its costs, it will shut down and exit the industry.
More precisely, new firms will enter if existing firms are making a profit and existing firms will exit if they are experiencing losses.
Long-run competitive equilibrium:
Answer: The situation in which the entry and exit of firms has resulted in the typical firm breaking even.
The long-run equilibrium market price is at a level equal to the minimum point on the typical firm’s average total cost curve.
Profits and losses:
Answer: If P > ATC, then a firm will make a profit.
If P = ATC, then a firm will break even.
If P < ATC, then a firm will experience losses.
When firms are making a profit, in the long run:
Answer: firms will enter the market until the marginal firm is earning zero economic profit
Wheat farming:
Retail bookselling:
Manufacturing cell phones:
Bridge building:
Answer: Perfectly competitive, many firms, identical product, high ease of entry
not p.c, many firms, differentiated product, high e.o.e
not p.c., few firms, differentiated, low e.o.e.
not p.c., few firms, differentiated, low e.o.e
TC=
TR=
VC=
Answer: ATC x Q
P x Q
AVC x Q
A firm makes a profit if:
A firm experiences a loss if:
Answer: P>ATC
P<ATC
Profit equals revenue minus total cost (TC), where revenue equals price multiplied by quantity:
Stated differently, this is equal to the profit margin (the difference in price and average total cost) multiplied by quantity:
The firm will break even, earning neither positive economic profits nor incurring losses, if:
Answer: Profit= (PxQ)-TC
Profit= (P-ATC)xQprice equals the average total cost of production.
The shutdown point is:
Answer: the minimum point on a firm’s average variable cost curve; if the price falls below this point, the firm shuts down production in the short run.
This is because if price is less than the average variable cost of production, then the firm is not receiving enough revenue from producing to cover its variable costs, with no money left over to pay for any of its fixed costs. If the firm shuts down, then its loss equals the fixed cost of production.
In perfectly competitive markets, prices are determined by
Answer: the interaction of market demand and market supply
In perfect competition, long-run equilibrium occurs when the economic profit is
Answer: zero
What is a price taker?
A price taker is:
Answer: a firm that is unable to affect the market price.
When are firms likely to be price takers?
A firm is likely to be a price taker when:
Answer: it represents a small fraction of the total market
Why do single firms in perfectly competitive markets face horizontal demand curves?
Answer: With many firms selling an identical product, single firms have no effect on market price.