Chapter 8: Problem 10
Explain how the profit-maximizing rule of setting \(\mathrm{P}=\mathrm{MC}\) leads a perfectly competitive market to be allocatively efficient.
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Chapter 8: Problem 10
Explain how the profit-maximizing rule of setting \(\mathrm{P}=\mathrm{MC}\) leads a perfectly competitive market to be allocatively efficient.
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Assuming that the market for cigarettes is in perfect competition, what does allocative and productive efficiency imply in this case? What does it not imply?
A single firm in a perfectly competitive market is relatively small compared to the rest of the market. What does this mean? How small is small?
How does a perfectly competitive firm calculate total revenue?
Why will losses for firms in a perfectly competitive industry tend to vanish in the long run?
What prevents a perfectly competitive firm from seeking higher profits by increasing the price that it charges?
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