3.4.2 - Perfect Competition Flashcards
State 6 assumptions regarding perfect competition
1) Firms aim to maximise profits.
2) There are many participants (both buyers and sellers).
3) The product is homogeneous.
4) There are no barriers to entry to or exit from the market.
5) There is perfect knowledge of market conditions.
6) There are no externalities.
Why is perfect competition ideal
- there is equality
- because if all its assumptions were fulfilled, and if all markets operated according to its precepts, the best allocation of resources would be ensured for society as a whole.
What is the assumption regarding perfect knowledge in perfect competition
- It is assumed that all participants in the market have perfect information about trading conditions in the market and production methods.
- In particular, buyers always know the prices that firms are charging and details of the product, and thus can buy the good at the cheapest possible price.
- Firms that try to charge a price above the market price will get no takers. At the same time, traders are aware of the product quality.
What is meant by no barrier to entry or exit
By this assumption, firms are able to join the market if they perceive it to be a profitable step, and they can exit from the market without hindrance. This assumption is important when it comes to considering the long-run equilibrium towards which the market will ten
What is meant by homogeneous product?
- This assumption means that buyers of the good see all products in the market as being identical, and will not favour one firm’s product over another.
- If there were brand loyalty, such that one firm was more popular than others, then that firm would be able to charge a premium on its price.
- By ruling out this possibility the previous assumption is reinforced, and no individual seller is able to influence the selling price of the product.
Why is it important that there are many participants in a perfect competition market structure
- that there are so many buyers and so many sellers that no individual trader is able to influence the market price. The market price is thus determined by the operation of the market.
- limited economies of scale meant minimum efficient scale is small relative to market demand then no firm is likely to become so large it will gain influence in the market
What are the consequences of there being no barriers to entry
- anyone can enter a market and start making goods to make a profit:easy to enter and leave a market
- As a result, business are unable to make huge profits in the long run and if they are making losses they are able to leave. In the long run, they make normal profits.
Diagram on p59 of CGP
Why can’t firms operating in perfect competition make supernormal profits in the long run
- there is perfect knowledge in a marlet therefore producers recognise an incentive to enter the market (supernormal profits) and they act on it due to no barriers to entry, hence the industry supply increases, lowering industry price and because firms are price makers they must accept the new prices. This effect of new firms netering and price lowering continues until the incentive of supernormal profits disappears, i.e price is lowered to a point where P=AC therefore ony normal profits are earnt here.
What is the implication if goods are homogenous
firms are price takers
- cannot set a price above the price set by industry as they lose their demand
- no point setting a price below the industry price because they make less profit, so they aren’t profit maximising as they should be
What is the long run equilibrium
when normal profits are made
How to draw diagrams
- industry on the left, firm on the right
- mc cuts ac at lowest point on ac
Why can’t firms make subnormal profit (loss) in the long run?
- Price is below AC, so firms are mkaing loss
- firms are incentivised to leave the market and produce their opportunity cost instead
- no barriers to exit means firms can leave the maket with no extra cost, so as firms leavem industry supply falls (left shift) and price rises and this continues until no more incentive to leave ie. normal profits are being made now
How does perfect competiton achieve allocative efficiency
In this market structure, P=MC at the long run when normal profits are made, therefore, yes allocative efficiency is achieved
- so resources follow consumer demand: consumers surplus is high, q is high, choice is high, price is low
Does perfect competition achieve productive efficiency
- Yes in the LR equilibrium , the firm is operating at the lowest point of the cost curve wher MC=MR bc they profit maximise but this relies on assumption that there are no economies of scale
- otherwise small firms cannot earn economeis of scale therefore they aren’t on lowest point of AC curve