lecture # 14 perfectly competitive markets lecturer: martin paredes

66
Lecture # 14 Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes Lecturer: Martin Paredes

Upload: jasia

Post on 14-Jan-2016

39 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes. Outline. Perfect Competition Defined Profit Maximisation Short Run Equilibrium Supply curve for the firm and market Equilibrium Producer surplus Long Run Equilibrium Equilibrium Conditions Supply Curve. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

Lecture # 14Lecture # 14

Perfectly Competitive Perfectly Competitive MarketsMarkets

Lecturer: Martin ParedesLecturer: Martin Paredes

Page 2: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

2

1. Perfect Competition Defined2. Profit Maximisation3. Short Run Equilibrium

Supply curve for the firm and market Equilibrium Producer surplus

4. Long Run Equilibrium Equilibrium Conditions Supply Curve

Page 3: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

3

Definition: A perfectly competitive market consists of firms that produce identical products that sell at the same price.

Each firm’s volume of output is so small in comparison to the overall market demand that no single firm has an impact on the market price.

Page 4: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

4

Assumptions: 1. Firms produce undifferentiated

products, in the sense that consumers perceive them to be identical.

2. Consumers have perfect information about the prices all sellers in the market charge

3. All firms (industry participants and new entrants) have equal access to resources (technology, inputs).

Page 5: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

5

Assumptions (cont.): 4. Each buyer’s purchases are so small that

he/she has an imperceptible effect on market price.

5. Each seller’s sales are so small that he/she has an imperceptible effect on market price.

6. Each seller’s input purchases are so small that he/she perceives no effect on input prices

Page 6: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

6

Implications of Assumptions: The Law of One Price:

Conditions (1) and (2) imply that there is a unique, single price at which all transactions occur.

Page 7: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

7

Implications of Assumptions: Price Takers:

Conditions (3) and (4) imply that buyers and sellers take the price of the product as given when making their purchase and output decisions.

Page 8: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

8

Implications of Assumptions: Free Entry:

Condition (5) and (6) implies that all firms have identical long run cost functions.

We need also need to assume that setup costs are easily achievable.

Page 9: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

9

Definition: The Economic Profit is the difference between total sales revenues and the economic cost (including opportunity costs).

Then, the firm’s objective is to choose the amount of output to maximise profits:

Max (q) = TR – TC = P· q – C(q)q

Page 10: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

10

Example:Suppose: Total Revenues € 10 M

Costs of supplies and labor € 9 M Owner’s opportunity cost

€ 2 M

Accounting Profit: € 10M – € 9M = € 1M

Economic Profit: € 10M – € 9M – € 2M = – € 1M

Business “destroys” € 1M of wealth of owner

Page 11: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

11

Since the firm’s objective is:

Max (q) = TR – TC = P· q – C(q)q

…then the first order condition is:

d(q) = 0 …or… dTR = dTC dq dq dq

The last term states that marginal revenue equals marginal cost.

Page 12: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

12

Notes: Recall that: If MR > MC then profit rises if output is

increased => Increase output. If MR < MC then profit falls if output is

increased => Decrease output. Therefore, the profit maximization

condition for any firm is MR = MC.

Page 13: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

13

Definition: A firm’s marginal revenue is the rate at which total revenue changes with respect to output.

MR = dTR(q) = d[P(q)· q] dq dq

In perfect competition, P(q) = P. As a result, MR = P.

Page 14: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

14

Note: Since MR = P under perfect competition,

then the profit maximization condition for a price-taking firm is P = MC.

Page 15: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

15

Example:Suppose:

The market price is P = 15 Each firm has the cost function:

TC(q) = 24q – 0.9q2 + 0.0167q3

=> MC(q) = 24 – 1.8q + 0.05q2

Page 16: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

16

Example: Profit Maximization Condition

€/yr

q (units per year)

Total revenue = pq

15

Page 17: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

17

Example: Profit Maximization Condition

€/yr

q (units per year)

Total revenue = pq

Total cost

Page 18: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

18

Example: Profit Maximization Condition

€/yr

q (units per year)

Total revenue = pq

Total cost

Total profit

Page 19: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

19

€/yr

q (units per year)

Total profit

306

Example: Profit Maximization Condition

Total cost

Total revenue = pq

Page 20: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

20

Example: Profit Maximization Condition

q (units per year)

q (units per year)

Total revenue = pq

P, MR15

€/yr

Page 21: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

21

Example: Profit Maximization Condition

q (units per year)

q (units per year)

P, MR

MC

Total Cost

€/yr

15

Total revenue = pq

Page 22: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

22

Example: Profit Maximization Condition

q (units per year)

q (units per year)

P, MR

MC

Total Cost

6 30

€/yr

15

Total revenue = pq

Page 23: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

23

Notes: At profit maximizing point:

P = MC MC is non-decreasing

Page 24: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

24

Notes: What is the firm’s demand curve?

The firm can sell as much as it likes at price P, so the firm’s demand curve is a straight line at P

What is the firm’s supply curve? It is defined by the MC curve, but not in

its entirety.

Page 25: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

25

Definition: The short run is the period of time in which the firm’s plant size is fixed and the number of firms in the industry is also fixed.

Firms need to take into account their respective short run total cost.

Page 26: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

26

Recall that the short run total cost function can be decomposed into two elements:

1. Total variable cost: TVC(q)2. Total fixed cost: TFC

In turn, the fixed cost can be divided into:a. Sunk fixed costs SFCb. Non-sunk fixed costs NSFC

Page 27: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

27

Then: TVC(q) + SFC + NSFC when

q > 0TC(q) =

SFCwhen q = 0

Obviously TFC = SFC + NSFC

Page 28: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

28

Definition: The short run supply curve for a firm tells us how the profit-maximizing output changes as the market price changes.

Page 29: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

29

General Idea: If the firm chooses to produce q > 0, then

condition P = SMC defines short run supply curve of the firm.

The firm produces q > 0 as long as:(q) (0)

If (q) < (0), then the firm shuts down.

Page 30: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

30

Definition: The shut-down price, Ps, is the price below which the firm would opt to produce zero.

The firm’s short run supply function is defined by:

SMC when P PS

s(P) = 0 when P < PS

Page 31: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

31

The value of Ps depends on the structure of the fixed costs. In particular, whether there are sunk costs or not.

Let’s look at two cases:1. All fixed costs are sunk

NSFC = 0 and SFC > 0 ==> (0) = SFC

2. All fixed costs are non-sunkNSFC > 0 and SFC = 0 ==> (0) = 0

Page 32: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

32

Case 1: NSFC = 0 and SFC > 0 Hence, TFC = SFC (fixed costs are all

sunk) The firm will choose to produce a positive

output only if:

(q) (0) …or…

P· q – TVC(q) – TFC – TFC = – SFC

Page 33: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

33

Case 1: NSFC = 0 and SFC > 0 In other words:

P· q – TVC(q) 0…which can be re-written as:

P AVC(q)

Therefore, the shut-down price, Ps, is the minimum point on the AVC curve.

Page 34: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

34

Quantity (units/yr)

€/yr

AVC

SAC

SMC

Example: Short Run Supply Curve of the Firm

NSFC = 0 and SFC > 0

Page 35: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

35

Quantity (units/yr)

€/yr

AVC

SAC

SMC

Ps

Example: Short Run Supply Curve of the Firm

NSFC = 0 and SFC > 0

Page 36: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

36

Example: Short Run Supply Curve of the Firm

NSFC = 0 and SFC > 0

Quantity (units/yr)

€/yr

AVC

SAC

SMC

Ps

Page 37: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

37

Case 1: NSFC = 0 and SFC > 0 A perfectly competitive firm may operate

in short run even if economic profit is negative.

At prices below SAC but above AVC, profits are negative if the firm produces…but the firm loses less by producing than by shutting down because of sunk costs.

Page 38: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

38

Case 2: NSFC > 0 and SFC = 0 The firm will choose to produce a positive

output only if:

(q) (0) …or…

P· q – TVC(q) – TFC 0

Page 39: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

39

Case 2: NSFC = 0 and SFC > 0 In other words:

P AVC(q) + AFC = SAC

Therefore, the shut-down price, Ps, is the minimum point on the SAC curve.

Page 40: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

40

AVC

SAC

SMC

Example: Short Run Supply Curve of the Firm

NSFC = 0 and SFC > 0

Quantity (units/yr)

Page 41: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

41

Quantity (units/yr)

€/yr

AVC

SAC

SMC

Ps

Example: Short Run Supply Curve of the Firm

NSFC = 0 and SFC > 0

Page 42: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

42

AVC

SAC

SMC

Ps

Example: Short Run Supply Curve of the Firm

NSFC = 0 and SFC > 0

Quantity (units/yr)

€/yr

Page 43: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

43

Definition: The market supply at any price is the

sum of the quantities each firm supplies at that price.

The short run market supply curve is the horizontal sum of the individual firm supply curves.

Page 44: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

44

Firm Type 1 Firm Type 2 Market supply

30

Q Q Q

P P PSMC1

20

SMC2

Example: From Short Run Firm Supply Curve to Short Run Market Supply Curve

Page 45: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

45

Definition: A short run perfectly competitive equilibrium occurs when the market quantity demanded equals the market quantity supplied:

ni=1 qs(P) = Qd(P)

where qs(P) is determined by the firm's individual profit maximization condition.

Page 46: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

46

Market:

Example: Short Run Perfectly Competitive Equilibrium

P*

Demand

Supply

€/unit

Q* m. units/yr

Page 47: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

47

Market: Typical firm:

Example: Short Run Perfectly Competitive Equilibrium

SMCSAC

AVCPs

P*

Demand

Supply

€/unit€/unit

Q* q* Units/yrm. units/yr

P*=MR

Page 48: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

48

Definition: The Producer Surplus is the area above the market supply curve and below the market price.It is a monetary measure of the benefit that producers derive from producing a good at a particular price.

Page 49: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

49

Example: Producer Surplus

Q

P

Market Supply Curve

Page 50: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

50

Example: Producer Surplus

Q

P

Market Supply Curve

P*

Page 51: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

51

Example: Producer Surplus

Q

P

Market Supply Curve

P*

Producer Surplus

Page 52: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

52

Notes: The producer earns the price for every

unit sold, but only incurs the (short run) marginal cost for each unit.

The distance between P and SMC curve measures the total benefit derived from production.

Page 53: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

53

Notes: Since the market supply curve equals the

sum of the individual supply curves, then the difference between price and the market supply curve measures the surplus of ALL producers in the market.

The producer’s surplus does not deduct fixed costs, so it does NOT equal profit!

Page 54: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

54

Definition: The long run supply curve for a firm tells us how the profit-maximizing output changes as the market price changes.

MC when P min(AC) = PS

s(P) = 0 when P < min(AC) =

PS

Page 55: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

55

Definition: A long run perfectly competitive equilibrium occurs at a market price, P*, a number of firms, n*, and an output per firm, q* that satisfies the following conditions:

1. Long run profit maximization with respect to output and plant size:

P* = MC(q*)

2. Zero economic profit: P* = AC(q*)

3. Demand equals supply: Qd(P*) = n*q*

Page 56: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

56

Example: Long Run Perfectly Competitive Equilibrium

Typical Firm Market

ACMC

SAC

SMC

P*

q*=50 q Q

$/unit$/unit

Market demand

Q*=10,000

n* = 10,000/50=200

Page 57: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

57

Summarizing long run equilibrium:If the firm’s strategy is based on: Skills that can be easily imitated Resources that can be easily acquiredThen, in the long run its economic profit

will be zero.

Page 58: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

58

Definition: The Long Run Market Supply Curve tells us the total quantity of output that will be supplied at various market prices, assuming that all long-run adjustments (plant, entry) take place.

Note: Since new entry can occur in the long run, we cannot obtain the long run market supply curve by summing the long run firms’ supply curves.

Page 59: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

59

Definition: A constant-cost industry is one in which a change in industry output does NOT affect input prices.

In a constant-cost industry, output changes in the long run occur along a horizontal line corresponding to the minimum level of long run average cost.

Page 60: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

60

In a constant-cost industry: If P > min(AC), entry would occur,

driving price back to min(AC) If P < min(AC), firms would earn

negative profits and would supply nothing

Page 61: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

61

Typical Firm Market

Example: Long Run Market Supply Curve

ACMC

SAC

SMC

15

50 q (000s) Q (M.)

$/unit$/unit

10

SS0

D0

LS

Page 62: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

62

Typical Firm Market

Example: Long Run Market Supply Curve

ACMC

SAC

SMC

15

50 52 q (000s) Q (M.)

$/unit$/unit

10

SS0

23

D0

D1

LS

Page 63: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

63

Typical Firm Market

Example: Long Run Market Supply Curve

ACMC

SAC

SMC

15

50 52 q (000s) Q (M.)

$/unit$/unit

10 18

SS0

23

D0

D1

SS1

LS

Page 64: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

64

Typical Firm Market

Example: Long Run Market Supply Curve

ACMC

SAC

SMC

15

50 52 q (000s) Q (M.)

$/unit$/unit

10 18

n** = 18,000/50 = 360

SS0

23

D0

D1

SS1

LS

Page 65: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

65

1. Perfectly Competitive markets have the following characteristics:

a. Homogeneous productsb. Perfect informationc. Atomicity or fragmentation (small

buyers and sellers)d. Equal access to resources

Page 66: Lecture # 14 Perfectly Competitive Markets Lecturer: Martin Paredes

66

2. A price taking firm maximizes profit by producing at an output level at which (rising) marginal cost equals the market price (which is the marginal revenue for a price-taking firm).

3. If all fixed costs are sunk, a perfectly competitive firm will produce positive output in the short run only if market price exceeds AVC.

4. The short run market supply is the horizontal sum of the short run supplies of individual firms.