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©2018 John M. Abowd and Jennifer P. Wissink, all rights reserved.
Unfinished Business from Perfect Competition then onto Simple Monopoly Lecture 22 Dr. Jennifer P. Wissink ©2018 John M. Abowd and Jennifer P. Wissink, all rights reserved. April 18, 2018
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Announcements: micro Spring 2018
About Prelim 2 See Blackboard for updates and announcements. TAs are still busy grading, but nearly finished… About MEL Remainder of semester quizzes are posted. Please REGULARLY check MEL site for due dates so you do not inadvertently miss any, if you are still in the hunt for points. Remember to check Results on MEL to see where you stand vis a vis the magic number of 600. The remaining quizzes (like on Family Feud) will be worth more points (each) than most of the previous quizzes, so if you are behind on points, take advantage of that. About i>clicker points PLEASE check Blackboard! There are a handful of you that have points BUT you are not attached to “us” on Blackboard yet, so I can’t give them to you. Remember to add the Class Add-On (reported at the top of announcements on Blackboard) to your My Grades number of points in your quest for 24 points. If you have i>clicker issues, do not me, you need to stop by my office with your device or REEF information and we can sleuth using the raw data on my SP3. About the final It’s cumulative but will heavily lean towards all this new material since prelim 2. Please sign up for the early exam (if that’s your intention) ASAP.
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Finding the Long Run Market Supply Curve (with identical firms)
THE MARKET a typical firm $ $ lratc 600 SRS0 w/N0* B b c A C a $2=P0* $2=P0* mr0=δ0 DN D0 SRSN w/NN* =700 Q0* Q QN* q0* q 300K 330K 350K 500 Note: Q0* = N0* times q0*
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Long Run Market Supply in a Perfectly Competitive Market (assuming a “constant cost” industry)
Both points A and C from the previous picture are long run equilibrium points. Point B is a temporary short run equilibrium point. If you connect all points like A and C you get the market long run supply curve in a perfectly competitive market. assumes tech doesn’t change with entry and exit assumes input prices don’t change with entry and exit P* called the “normal” price. SRS w/N* SRS w/N** B P’ A C P* LRS LRS Dnew Dold Q* Q’ Q** Q
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External Economies and External Diseconomies
If the industry exhibits no external economies or diseconomies, then the industry long run supply curve is perfectly elastic (horizontal). The industry grows by replicating firms at the efficient scale. Entry and exit leaves the position of cost curves intact. This is often called a constant cost industry. If the industry exhibits external diseconomies, then the industry long run supply curve is upward sloping. The minimum average total cost of all firms in the industry rises as the size of the market grows (and falls as it contracts). This is often called an increasing cost industry. If the industry exhibits external economies, then the industry long run supply curve is downward sloping. The minimum average total cost falls as the size of the industry grows (and rises as it contracts). This is often called a decreasing cost industry. Note the difference between EXTERNAL economies/diseconomies and INTERNAL economies/diseconomies of scale
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Long Run Market Supply in a Perfectly Competitive Market (assuming an “increasing cost” industry)
$ SRSold SRSnew LRS B E A $2=P0* Dnew Dold Q
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Long Run Perfectly Competitive Equilibrium - Performance
Two Efficiency Definitions The market equilibrium quantity traded (Q) is Pareto/Allocatively Efficient(AE) if net social surplus in the market is maximized. The firm is productively efficient(pe) if its output level (q) is such that the firm’s long-run average total costs are minimized. Question: Do we get either... or both... under perfect competition?
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Answer: 1st Fundamental Theorem of Welfare Economics In Pictures
THE MARKET a typical firm $ $ SRS w/N* lratc A a mr=δ P* P* D Q* Q q* q
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Long Run Perfectly Competitive Equilibrium - Performance
Equity: Is the outcome of the competitive process fair? Equitable? Just? Good questions that we do not answer here and now. What do you think? A. The market process is fair B. The market process is unfair
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RECALL…Various Market Structures Next Batter Up = Monopoly
Perfectly Competitive: many firms identical products free entry and exit full and symmetric information Monopoly: single firm no close substitutes, only imperfect substitutes in related markets barriers to entry and possibly exit full and symmetric information, or possibly not
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Sources of Monopoly Entry Barriers
Technical: Natural monopoly Vital input ownership Technical secrets (the better mousetrap) Legal: Patents Franchises Licenses Strategic: Buy ‘em up Blow ‘em up Let’s make a deal AT&T and Time Warner Chiefs to Testify,
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Natural Monopoly versus Perfect Competition (& Non-natural Monopoly)
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