Perfect Competition Flashcards
market
a means by which buyers and sellers are brought together so that goods and services can be bought and sold
industry
group of firms selling goods/services on a particular market
this means all the firms in an industry are engaged in the production of similar products
market structure
the economic circumstances under which a good or service is traded
perfect competition
lots of firms producing identical goods/services
monopoly
one firm supplies all the goods/services
imperfect competition
many different firms producing similar but not identical goods/services
duopoly- two firms produce the total output
oligopoly- many firms produce the total output
assumptions under perfect competition
- there is a large number of relatively small firms in the industry
- there is a large number of relatively small consumers in the industry
- firms aim to make max. profit
- freedom of entry to/from industry
- widespread knowledge of profits being earned in the industry
- products are homogenous
- all firms have a perfectly elastic supply of the F.O.P
- all firms produce at min. average cost
implications of the assumptions under PC
not very common in reality applies to a small proportion of goods/services eg: -fresh fruit and veg -stock markets -foreign currency markets
currency market
- homogenous product - ie a dollar is a dollar wherever you trade it
- many buyers and sellers - all price takers
- high quality real time info and low transaction costs
price taker
any firm that cannot determine its own price
perfect competition diagram long run
PRICE: AR=MR=D as it is a price taker
QUANTITY: assuming the firm wants to make max. profits, it will produce the quantity where MR=MC provided MC>MR for all quantities after that
PROFIT: the firm is earning normal profit, as if they were earning above more firms would enter the industry
advantages of perfect competition
- minimum prices are charged
- no advertising needed, lowers costs
- efficiency is encouraged, which benefits society, as only firms who produce at the lowest AC will survive
- no exploitation of customers as no SNPs
disadvantages of perfect competition
- no choice to the consumer as all products are homogenous
- all firms are relatively small, and therefore do not benefit from economies of scale
- lack of SNPs discourage R&D and entrepreneurship
why does a firm under perfect competition not engage in advertising
- would raise costs without raising a firms sales, as consumers cannot distinguish one firms output from another
- each firm has a perfectly elastic demand for its product at existing prices
- advertising by a single firm would benefit the entire industry