ECON 202 Study Guide - Perfect Competition, Opportunity Cost, Marginal Product

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30 Oct 2014
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The production process: the behavior of profit-maximizing firms. Firms vary in size and internal organization, but they all take inputs and transform them into outputs through a process called production. In perfect competition, no single firm has any control over prices. This follows from two assumptions: perfectly competitive industries are composed of many firms, each small relative to the size of the industry, each firm in a perfectly competitive industry produces homogeneous products. Profit-maximizing firms in all industries must make three choices: how much input to supply, how to produce that output, how much of each input to demand. If you start a business or buy a share of stock in a corporation, you do so because you expect to make a normal rate of return. Investors will not invest their money in a business unless they expect to make a normal rate of return.

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