Chapter 8: Problem 17
Briefly explain the reason for the shape of a marginal revenue curve for a perfectly competitive firm.
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Chapter 8: Problem 17
Briefly explain the reason for the shape of a marginal revenue curve for a perfectly competitive firm.
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Explain how the profit-maximizing rule of setting \(\mathrm{P}=\mathrm{MC}\) leads a perfectly competitive market to be allocatively efficient.
What prevents a perfectly competitive firm from seeking higher profits by increasing the price that it charges?
In the argument for why perfect competition is allocatively efficient, the price that people are willing to pay represents the gains to society and the marginal cost to the firm represents the costs to society. Can you think of some social costs or issues that are not included in the marginal cost to the firm? Or some social gains that are not included in what people pay for a good?
Would independent trucking fit the characteristics of a perfectly competitive industry?
If new technology in a perfectly competitive market brings about a substantial reduction in costs of production, how will this affect the market?
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