Title: The Rise and Fall of
 1The Rise and Fall of
Industries 
 2Examples of rising and falling industries
- Beef 
- chicken 
- bagel stores 
- smoothies 
- video rental stores 
- drive-in movies 
3Long Run vs. Short Run in an Industry
- Long run for an industry 
- Firms have either entered or exited the industry 
- Short run for an industry 
- Firms have neither entered nor exited the 
 industry
- Contrast long run vs. short run for a firm 
- Long run can adjust all inputs 
- Short run can adjust some but not all inputs
4The Long Run Competitive Equilibrium Model
- Its Dynamic! 
- It has three key ingredients 
-  Two we have seen before 
- The third is new
5(1) Each firm has the typical MC, ATC, AVC graph 
 6(2) Each firm is competitive, and the Market 
demand curve is downward sloping 
 7(3) Free entry and exit
- Firms can enter the industry or exit the industry 
- firms exit the industry if profits are negative 
 (losses)
- firms enter the industry if profits are positive 
- Note that the definition of profits is economic 
 profits
- Opportunity costs are part of total costs
8The Typical Firm and the Market 
 9What happens if there is an increase in demand?
- First, look at short run effects 
- Then, look at what happens over time as firms 
 enter or exit
- Finally, check out the new long run equilibrium 
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 11Now lets do it by hand to see how the curves 
change over time 
 12Using the Model to explain the real world. 
Consider an example 
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 14Now consider a decrease in demand
- Short run effects 
- dynamics over time 
- new long run equilibrium 
15   16Another nice feature of competitive markets
- Since profits are zero in long run equilibrium, P 
 ATC
- Thus, in long run industry equilibrium ATC is at 
 a minimum
- In other words, cost per unit is a low as you can 
 go
17What if there is a shift in costs?Shift down 
both the ATC and the MC curvesWatch what happens 
 18External Economies of Scale
- When a whole industry expands, the firms costs 
 may shift down even though the scale at each firm
 does not expand
- Contrast with (internal) economies of scale at a 
 single firm
19To illustrate external economies of scale shift 
both the demand curve and the cost curves. Lets 
look at a hand sketch again 
 20Look more carefully at market supply and demand 
 21Can also have external diseconomies of scale 
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