ECON 1011 Chapter Notes - Chapter 14: Perfect Competition, Market Price, Marginal Cost

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ECON 1011 Full Course Notes
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Individual firm supply in the short run the quantity from the marginal cost curve for all prices above minimum avc: = 0 when p < min avc. The firm loses more money by producing than it does by closing down whenever. Output per firm falls to original level. Total market output increases since there are more firms in industry. In a perfectly competitive market, the price is set equal to the minimum average cost: efficiency effects of perfect competition vs monopolies. Number of firms will adjust so that industry marginal cost curve intersects demand at the minimum market ac curve. Price = pc, market quantity supplied and demanded = qc. Firms make zero profit: the effect of competition. Firm owner profit disappears ((pm acm)qm to zero) Consumer surplus increases; more consumers buy more of the product and pay a lower price: the effect of monopolization. Firm owner raises price and reduces output.

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