Title: ECON 351
1ECON 351
- Week 09
- The Firm in Competition
- (Chapter 8, 9)
2Demand Facing the Firm
P
P
P
P
D1
D3
D4
D2
Q
Q
Q
Q
?Increasing degrees of Competition ? ?
Increasing degrees of Market Power ?
3Alternative Economic Models
P
P
P
P
D1
D3
D4
D2
Q
Q
Q
Q
Monopoly
Oligopoly
Monopolistic Competition
Perfect Competition (Price Taker)
?Increasing degrees of Competition ? ?
Increasing degrees of Market Power ?
4Alternative Market Structures
- The Most Competitive Case
- The Price Taker Firm
5Assumptions for a Price Taker
- Large number of buyers sellers
- Homogeneous products
- Low information costs to buyers sellers
- Low costs of entry and exit of firms
6Market and Firm Demand
P
P
Firm
Market
D
S
Pe
Pe
D
S
D
Q/T
Qe
Q/T
7Price Taker Firm
P
MC
Price Marginal Revenue
Pe
D MR
Profit Maximizing Rate of output
Qe
Q/T
8Total Revenue Pe x Qe
P
MC
Pe
D
Total Revenue
Qe
Q/T
9Total Cost AC x Q
P
MC
AC
Pe
D
AC at Qe
Total Cost
Qe
Q/T
10 Profit TR - TC
P
MC
AC
Pe
D
Q
Q/T
11Profits occur if (PMC) gt AC
P
MC
AC
Pe
D MR
Qe
Q/T
12Market Response to Profits
P
D
So
S
Pe
P
D
So
Qx/T
Qe
Q
13Price Taker Firm Zero Profits
P
MC
ATC
D
Pe
D MR
Qe
Q/T
14Price Taker Firm Loss
P
ATC
MC
Loss
Pe
D MR
Qe
Q/T
15Price Taker Firm Loss Shutdown?
ATC
P
MC
AVC
Loss
Pe
D MR
Stay in Business SR
TVC
Qe
Q/T
16Price Taker Firm Loss Shutdown?
ATC
P
MC
AVC
Loss
Pe
D MR
ShutDown in SR
TVC
Q/T
Qe
17Market Response to Losses
P
D
S
So
P
Po
D
S
Qx/T
Q
Qo
18Price Taker Firm Zero Profits
P
MC
ATC
Pe
D MR
Po
D
Qe
Q/T
19Price Taker Firm Short Run Supply
ATC
P
MC
Short-Run Supply
AVC
Pe
D MR
ShutDown in SR
TVC
Q/T
Qe
20Pork Swine Flu
- Association ?Demand ?(? Price Falls)
- Industry lobbies ? Name to H1N1 virus
- China prohibits imports from US ?Demand
- Existing firms make losses (1/6 of industry)
- Firms leave industry ? (? Supply) ??Price
21Implications of Price-Taker Industry
- Demand for the firm is horizontal at the market
price - Efficiency Price equals marginal cost of
production - Competition drives price to equal Average cost
- Economic profits only exist in the short-run.
22Long-Run Industry Equilibrium
P
P
Firm
Market
MC
D
S
ATC
Pe
Pe
D
S
D
Q/T
Qe
Qe
Q/T
23ECON 351
- Using the Competitive Model
- Chapter 09
24Market Interaction
P x
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
2 1
Demand
Supply
Pe
Exchange Value
Dx
Qtyx /T
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12
Qe
25Allocation Efficiency Price allocates the goods
to highest valued users
Market Demand determines Price. Each buyer
responds to price by buying till Marginal Value
equals price. No reallocation can generate
greater value.
Market
A
B
C
P
Demand
Supply
P
P
P
D
D
D
Pe
Pe
Qa
Qb
Qe
Qc
Q/T
Marginal Value A Marginal Value B
Marginal Value C Market Price
26Production Efficiency Price coordinates the
efficient use or resources
Market Supply is the sum of the industry output
at alternative prices. Each firm produces up to
the quantity where Price Marginal Cost. No
reallocation of resources will produce at a lower
opportunity cost.
Market
Firm 2
Firm 1
Firm 3
P
Demand
P
P
P
Supply
S2
Pe
S1
Pe
S3
Qe
Q/T
Q1
Q2
Q3
Market Price Marginal Cost Firm 1
Marginal Cost Firm 2 Marginal Cost Firm 3
27Market is Efficient since at Qe the Marginal
Value Marginal cost
P x
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
2 1
Demand
Supply
Pe
Dx
Marginal Cost
Marginal Value
Qtyx /T
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12
Qe
28 Demand Marginal Value
MVx
Consumer Surplus Value (MV Price)
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
2 1
Pe
Exchange Value
MVx Dx
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Qtyx / T
Qe
29Supply Reflects Marginal Cost
P x
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
2 1
The height reflects the marginal cost of
producing an additional unit.
Pe
Producer Surplus Value Price Marginal Cost
Qtyx /T
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12
Qe
30Market Gains from Trade
P x
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
2 1
Demand
C.S V.
Supply
Pe
P.S.V.
Dx
Sx
Qtyx /T
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12
Qe
31Market Efficiency Reduced Output
P x
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
2 1
Demand
Supply
Efficiency Loss
Pe
Dx
Sx
Qtyx /T
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12
Qe
32Market EfficiencyIncreased Output
P x
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
2 1
Demand
Supply
Efficiency Loss
Pe
Dx
Sx
Qtyx /T
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12
Qe
33Market Outcome is Efficient
- Marginal Value (MV) of last unit produced
Marginal Cost of production (MC) - Producing less ? Efficiency loss
- Producing more ? Efficiency Loss
34Periods of Analysis
- Long-Run All inputs are variable (prospective)
- Short-Run Some inputs fixed, some variable
- Market Period All inputs Fixed ? Output Fixed (
vertical supply)
35Market Analysis
- The Market for Rental apartments
- Analyze an increase in demand
- Analyze price effects in the market period
- Analyze supply and price effects in the long-run
36 Rent
Supply
LR new Supply
D0
New LR Equilibrium
2000
1600
1400
D1
Units/Month
1000
1500
37 Rent
Supply
D0
Price Ceiling
1400
D1
Short
Units/Month
1000
1500
38Implications Price Ceiling below Equilibrium
- Increased Transaction Costs to Buyers Sellers
- Increase in Non-Market rationing Discrimination
- Decrease in Quality
- Decrease in Supply
39THE EFFICIENCY OF A COMPETITIVE MARKET
The Market for Human Kidneys
Figure 9.6
Supply QS 16,000 0.4P Demand QD
32,000?0.4P
The Market for Kidneys and the Effect of the
National Organ Transplantation Act
The market-clearing price is 20,000 at this
price, about 24,000 kidneys per year would be
supplied. The law effectively makes the price
zero. About 16,000 kidneys per year are still
donated this constrained supply is shown as
S. The loss to suppliers is given by rectangle A
and triangle C. If consumers received kidneys at
no cost, their gain would be given by rectangle A
less triangle B.
40THE EFFICIENCY OF A COMPETITIVE MARKET
The Market for Human Kidneys
Supply QS 16,000 0.4P Demand QD
32,000?0.4P
Figure 9.6
The Market for Kidneys and the Effect of the
National Organ Transplantation Act (continued)
In practice, kidneys are often rationed on the
basis of willingness to pay, and many recipients
pay most or all of the 40,000 price that clears
the market when supply is constrained.
Rectangles A and D measure the total value of
kidneys when supply is constrained.
41Price Floor above Equilibrium
- How does the labor Market work?
- What happens when you place the Minimum Wage
above Equilibrium wage ?
42Unskilled Labor Market
Wage
Supply of Labor
Demand
Min. Wage
Wage E
Surplus Unemployment
Qty/T
Qd
QE
Qs
43The Minimum Wage A Price Floor
Wage
D
S
Minimum Wage
Pe
D
Qd
Qs
Qe
Qty / T
44Implications of Price Floor above Equilibrium
- Increase in transaction costs
- Increase in non-market rationing (discrimination)
- Increase in quality (not demand driven)
- Increase in supply
- Wealth transfer from unemployed to employed
45MINIMUM PRICES
Airline Regulation
Figure 9.9
Effect of Airline Regulation by the Civil
Aeronautics Board
At price Pmin, airlines would like to supply Q2,
well above the quantity Q1 that consumers will
buy. Here they supply Q3. Trapezoid D is the
cost of unsold output. Airline profits may have
been lower as a result of regulation because
triangle C and trapezoid D can together exceed
rectangle A. In addition, consumers lose A B.
46PRICE SUPPORTS AND PRODUCTION QUOTAS
? Price Support Price set by government above
free-market level and maintained by governmental
purchases of excess supply.
Figure 9.10
Price Supports
To maintain a price Ps above the market-clearing
price P0, the government buys a quantity Qg. The
gain to producers is A B D. The loss to
consumers is A B. The cost to the government
is the speckled rectangle, the area of which is
Ps(Q2 - Q1).
Total change in welfare ?CS ?PS - Cost to
Govt. D - (Q2 - Q1)Ps
47Taxes Price Effects
48Sales Tax on Buyers
Sx
Price x
Pb
Pe
Tax Revenue
Ps
Dx
Dx
Qty x /T
Qe
Qt
49 Tax on Sellers
Sx
Price x
Sx
Pb
Pe
Tax Revenue
Ps
Dx
Qty x /T
Qe
Qt
50Who bares the burden of a tax?
- The distribution of the tax burden is identical
for either a sales tax on buyers or an excise tax
on sellers. - When the price to buyers including the tax rises,
consumers lose consumer surplus - When the price to sellers after the tax falls,
sellers lose previous revenue.
51Tax Burden Inelastic Demand
Price x
Pb
Sx
Pe
Tax
Ps
Dx
Qty x /T
Qe
Qt
52Tax Burden Inelastic Supply
Sx
Price x
Pb
Pe
Tax
Ps
Dx
Qty x /T
Qe
Qt
53Tax Burden Fixed Supply
Price x
Sx
900
Tax 100
800
Lost Revenue
Tax 100
700
Dx
Qe
Qd
Qty x /T
54Tax Burden Relative Elasticity
- The burden of a tax (either sales or excise)
depends on the relative elasticity of demand and
supply. - If demand is more inelastic then supply ? Buyers
bare a larger portion of the burden. - Is supply is more inelastic than demand, sellers
bare a larger portion of the burden.
55TaxiCab Supply Restriction
Price
.70 .60 .50 .40 .30 Pe
.20 .10 .05
Efficiency Loss
Supply
Increased Revenue
D1
Do
100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900
1000 1100 Q x/ T
Qe
56International Trade
- Allowing Trade leads to an Efficiency Gain
- Restrictions on Trade create an Efficiency Loss
57International Trade
Rest of World
United States
P P1 P2 P3
P P1 P2 P3
S us
S r
St
D us
Dr
Qty US
Qty Row
Q1 Q2
Q1 Q2
58IMPORT QUOTAS AND TARIFFS
? import quota Limit on the quantity of a good
that can be imported.
? tariff Tax on an imported good.
Figure 9.14
Import Tariff or Quota That Eliminates Imports
In a free market, the domestic price equals the
world price Pw. A total Qd is consumed, of which
Qs is supplied domestically and the rest
imported. When imports are eliminated, the price
is increased to P0. The gain to producers is
trapezoid A. The loss to consumers is A B C,
so the deadweight loss is B C.
59IMPORT QUOTAS AND TARIFFS
Figure 9.15
Import Tariff or Quota (General Case)
When imports are reduced, the domestic price is
increased from Pw to P. This can be achieved by
a quota, or by a tariff T P - Pw. Trapezoid A
is again the gain to domestic producers. The loss
to consumers is A B C D. If a tariff is
used, the government gains D, the revenue from
the tariff. The net domestic loss is B C. If a
quota is used instead, rectangle D becomes part
of the profits of foreign producers, and the net
domestic loss is B C D.
60IMPORT QUOTAS AND TARIFFS
The Sugar Quota
U.S. supply QS ? 7.48 0.84P U.S. demand QD
26.7 ? 0.23P
Figure 9.16
Sugar Quota in 2005
At the world price of 12 cents per pound, about
23.9 billion pounds of sugar would have been
consumed in the United States in 2005, of which
all but 2.6 billion pounds would have been
imported. Restricting imports to 5.3 billion
pounds caused the U.S. price to go up by 15 cents.
61IMPORT QUOTAS AND TARIFFS
The Sugar Quota (Continued)
U.S. supply QS ? 7.48 0.84P U.S. demand QD
26.7 ? 0.23P
Figure 9.16
Sugar Quota in 2005 (continued)
The gain to domestic producers was trapezoid A,
about 1.3 billion. Rectangle D, 795 million,
was a gain to those foreign producers who
obtained quota allotments. Triangles B and C
represent the deadweight loss of about 1.2
billion. The cost to consumers, A B C D,
was about 3.3 billion.
62The Sugar Import Quota
U. S.
Rest of World
S us
S T
P
P
P4
S T
S T
P3
Quota
P2
P5
P1
Dus
D r
Q1 Q2
Qus
Qus i
Qus
Qty US
Qty Row