Chapter-9-Summary-Part-1 With Explanation
Chapter-9-Summary-Part-1 With Explanation
Chapter-9-Summary-Part-1 With Explanation
Objectives:
Example:
Consider a farmers market where each vendor sells the same type of milk.
There is little differentiation between each of their products, as they use the
same recipe, and they each sell them at an equal price. Customers also can’t
determine the difference like if this milk came from that big cow or the other
one. An individual or business that must accept market prices because it lacks
the market share to do so on its own is known as a price-taker. In a market
with perfect competition, all players in the economy are viewed as price
takers.
Price taker
The firm can’t set price; rather, the firm “takes” the price established by the
market’s supply and demand.
If businesses’ refuse to follow the market price that are set, customers will
purchase the product from one of the many rival companies that sell it for less
than the market price if a single firm tries to charge a price that is higher than the
market price. However, the business won't want to charge less than what the
market would bear.
The price at which a good or service can currently be purchased or sold is known
as the market price. The dynamics of supply and demand influence the market
price of a good or service.
Advertising’s purpose is to enable the firm to sell more products at a higher price.
In a perfectly competitive market, advertising is a waste of money. Advertising
doesn't allow the perfectly competitive firm to charge a higher price because it is
a price taker, and since it can already sell any amount of its products, there is no
need for advertising to increase sales. Since everyone is aware that businesses in
every industry produce the same goods, advertising has no place in such a
structure. Additionally, consumers are already fully informed about the market
choices that are available to them.
where Qd is the market quantity demanded and P is the market price in dollars.
Total cost has two components — total fixed cost and total variable cost. Total
fixed cost is a constant, so even if your firm shuts down and produces zero units
of output, it still incurs total fixed cost. In Figure 9-1, total fixed cost corresponds
to the point where the total cost curve intersects the vertical axis at TFC.
Economists use the terms profit and economic profit interchangeably. Economic
profit is defined as the difference between total revenue and the explicit plus
implicit costs of production.
As an equation:
The explicit costs plus implicit costs include every cost associated with production,
including the opportunity cost of your time and financial investment. Therefore, if
economic profit equals zero, you stay in business.