Key Points
The Theory of the Firm under under Perfect Competition
Defining Features of Perfect Competition
A perfectly competitive market is characterized by a large number of buyers and sellers, homogenous products, free entry and exit for firms, and perfect information among all participants.
Price-Taking Behavior
The defining characteristic of perfect competition is price-taking behavior. Individual firms and buyers must accept the market price and cannot influence it because they are too small relative to the market.
Revenue in Perfect Competition
For a price-taking firm, the market price (p) is equal to its Average Revenue (AR) and its Marginal Revenue (MR). Therefore, the relationship is p = AR = MR.
The Firm's Demand Curve
The demand curve facing an individual firm in a perfectly competitive market is a horizontal line at the market price. This indicates that the demand is perfectly elastic.
Goal of Profit Maximization
The primary assumption is that a firm aims to maximize its profit. Profit is calculated as the difference between Total Revenue (TR) and Total Cost (TC).
Condition 1 for Profit Maximization
A firm's profit is maximized at the level of output where Marginal Revenue (MR) equals Marginal Cost (MC). In perfect competition, this condition becomes Price (p) equals Marginal Cost (MC).
Condition 2 for Profit Maximization
At the profit-maximizing output level, the Marginal Cost (MC) must be non-decreasing. The MC curve cannot be downward sloping at the point where it intersects with the price line.
Short-Run Production Condition
In the short run, a firm will only produce a positive level of output if the market price (p) is greater than or equal to the minimum Average Variable Cost (AVC).
Long-Run Production Condition
In the long run, a firm will only produce a positive level of output if the market price (p) is greater than or equal to the minimum Long-Run Average Cost (LRAC).
The Firm's Short-Run Supply Curve
A firm's short-run supply curve is the rising portion of its Short-Run Marginal Cost (SMC) curve from and above the minimum point of the Average Variable Cost (AVC) curve.
The Firm's Long-Run Supply Curve
A firm's long-run supply curve is the rising portion of its Long-Run Marginal Cost (LRMC) curve from and above the minimum point of the Long-Run Average Cost (LRAC) curve.
Shutdown and Break-Even Points
The shutdown point is the minimum of the AVC curve, below which the firm stops producing in the short run. The break-even point is the minimum of the AC curve, where the firm earns only normal profit.
Determinants of a Firm's Supply
A firm's supply curve can shift due to technological progress or changes in input prices. Technological progress shifts the supply curve rightward, while an increase in input prices shifts it leftward.
Deriving the Market Supply Curve
The market supply curve is the horizontal summation of the individual supply curves of all firms in the market. An increase in the number of firms shifts the market supply curve to the right.
Price Elasticity of Supply
Price elasticity of supply measures the responsiveness of quantity supplied to a change in price. It is calculated as the percentage change in quantity supplied divided by the percentage change in price.
Quick Revision Tips
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