MGEA02H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 12: Marginal Cost, Decision-Making, Economic Surplus

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MGEA02H3 Full Course Notes
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MGEA02H3 Full Course Notes
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Lecture 12 will cover chapter 12 of the microeconomics textbook. A perfectly competitive market is a hypothetical market where competition is at its greatest possible level: neo-classical economists argued that perfect competition would produce the best possible outcomes for consumers and their society. Perfectly competitive markets exhibit the following characteristics: there is perfect knowledge, with no information failure or time lags in the flow of information. Each unit of input, such as units of labour, are also homogeneous: no single firm can influence the market price, or market conditions. The single firm is said to be a price taker, taking its price from the whole industry: the single firm will not increase its price independently given that it will not sell any goods at all. Neither will the rational producer lower price below the market price given that it can sell all it produces at the market price: there are very many firms in the market too many to measure.

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