Perfect Competition
Perfect Competition
Perfect Competition
equals:
A) total cost.
B) price.
When a firm operates under conditions of perfect competition, marginal revenue always
equals price. This is because, in perfect competition, price is constant (a horizontal line) so
that marginal revenue is constant.
Suppose a price-taker firm produces baseball bats that sell at a price of $100 each. This firm’s
average total cost at the current level of production is $150 per bat, and the average fixed cost
is $40 per bat. Which of the following statements is most accurate regarding this firm? They
should:
A) continue producing baseball bats because they are covering their fixed costs.
B) shut down in the short run because their average variable cost is greater than their price.
C) shut down in the short run because their average total cost is greater than their price.
Variable costs = $150 (ATC) and $40 (AFC) = $110 (AVC). At a selling price of $100 the
firm is not covering its variable costs and will have losses greater than its fixed costs if it
stays in business.
A perfectly competitive firm will not expand its output beyond the quantity where:
A) the marginal cost is greater than marginal revenue.
A perfectly competitive firm will tend to expand its output so long as the market price is
greater than marginal cost. In the short term and long term, profit is maximized when P =
MC.
Which of the following is most accurate for a price-taker firm in long-run equilibrium when
there are no barriers to entry?
A) P = AVC = MR.
B) TC = TR = MC.
C) P = MC = ATC = MR.
For a price-taker firm, long-run equilibrium is where P = MC = ATC. For price taking firms,
P = MC. Competition eliminates economic profits in the long run so that P = ATC.
Under perfect competition, a firm will experience zero long term economic profit when:
B) MC = ATC = MR = price.
B) be a revenue maximizer.
A firm operating as a price taker will produce quantity where MC = MR. It will maximize
profit and not revenue. In the long run, it will make zero economic profits after taking into
account fair return on capital.
A firm operating under conditions of perfect competition will generate zero economic profit
in the long run. Firms may generate economic profits in the short run, but due to the lack of
entry barriers, new competitors will enter the market and prices will adjust downward until
economic profits become zero.
A firm operating under perfect competition will experience economic losses when which of
the following conditions exists?
Under perfect competition, a firm will experience economic losses when its selling price is
less than average total cost.
Assume that a perfectly competitive firm produces 10 units of a good and sells them each for
a price (P) equal to $15. If the marginal cost (MC) of the 10th unit is $15 and the average
total cost (ATC) is $13, economic profit for the firm is closest to:
A) $0.
B) $20.
C) $120.
A profit maximizing firm will expand output as long as marginal revenue is:
A competitive firm faces a flat demand curve. This means the price is constant and the
marginal revenue line is flat. A firm will continue to produce as long as MR > MC, so the
competitive firm will produce as long as P > MC. It will stop when MC = MR = P.
All firms will continue to expand production until marginal revenue = marginal cost.
In the short run, if price is below average total cost (ATC) the firm will:
B) raise prices.
C) produce more.
In the short run, if the firm is covering its average variable costs and some of its fixed costs it
will continue to operate as long as the situation is temporary.
In the long run, if price is below average total cost (ATC) the firm will:
A) keep running.
B) shut down.
If the price is below ATC then the firm is losing money. If the firm believes the price will
never exceed ATC the only way to eliminate fixed costs is to go out of business.
Under perfect competition, a firm will be inclined to increase output as long as which of the
following conditions exists?
A firm will continue to expand output as long as it is possible to earn an economic profit. In
other words, a firm will expand output as long as marginal revenue is greater than marginal
cost.
A perfectly competitive firm will continue to increase output so long as which of the
following conditions exists?
A perfectly competitive firm will tend to expand its output so long as the market price is
greater than marginal cost since price and marginal revenue are equal. In the short term and
long term, profit is maximized when marginal cost and marginal revenue are equal (i.e., MC
= MR).
A firm in a perfectly competitive industry that seeks to maximize profit is most likely to
continue production in the short run as long which of the following conditions exists? Price is
equal to or greater than:
B) marginal cost.
If a firm is covering its average variable costs, it will continue to operate in the short run
since it is covering some portion of its fixed costs.
Which of the following most accurately describes the relationship between price (P), marginal
cost (MC), and marginal revenue (MR) at the profit maximizing output level for a firm in a
perfectly competitive industry?
B) P > MC = MR.
C) P = MC = MR.
For a perfectly competitive firm, maximum profit occurs at the output level where marginal
revenue equals marginal cost. And, since the demand curve faced by each firm in perfect
competition is horizontal, marginal revenue is equal to price.