Chapter 8: Problem 13
What is a "price taker" firm?
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Chapter 8: Problem 13
What is a "price taker" firm?
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Can you name five examples of perfectly competitive markets? Why or why not?
Productive efficiency and allocative efficiency are two concepts achieved in the long run in a perfectly competitive market. These are the two reasons why we call them "perfect." How would you use these two concepts to analyze other market structures and label them "imperfect?"
Why will losses for firms in a perfectly competitive industry tend to vanish in the long run?
A firm's marginal cost curve above the average variable cost curve is equal to the firm's individual supply curve. This means that every time a firm receives a price from the market it will be willing to supply the amount of output where the price equals marginal cost. What happens to the firm's individual supply curve if marginal costs increase?
What are the four basic assumptions of perfect competition? Explain in words what they imply for a perfectly competitive firm.
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