1 / 79

Chapter 9 Price-taking Model

Chapter 9 Price-taking Model. Contents:. Market Conditions of a Price-taking Market Demand and Revenue Curves of a Price-taker Equilibrium of a Wealth-Maximizing Firm Short Run Model Long Run Model Efficiency and Price-taking Market Appendix I Appendix II Appendix III. Contents:.

Download Presentation

Chapter 9 Price-taking Model

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 9Price-taking Model

  2. Contents: • Market • Conditions of a Price-taking Market • Demand and Revenue Curves of a Price-taker • Equilibrium of a Wealth-Maximizing Firm • Short Run Model • Long Run Model • Efficiency and Price-taking Market • Appendix I • Appendix II • Appendix III

  3. Contents: • Advanced Material 9.1 • Advanced Material 9.2

  4. Market

  5. What is a market? • A market (市場) is a system governed by a set of rules or customs under which a well-defined good is exchanged.

  6. Price-taking markets • A price-taker: is a participant who • cannot affect the market price • has to take (accept) whatever price that the market determines. • To a price-taker, • the market is a price-taking market or aperfectly competitive market.

  7. Price-searching markets • A price-searcher : is a participant who • canaffect the market price • has tosearch for the wealth-maximizing price. • To a price-searcher, • the market is a price-searching market or an imperfectly competitive market

  8. Conditions of a Price-Taking Market

  9. Conditions of a price-taking market 1. Large/Small number of sellers Large 2. Homogeneous/Heterogeneousgoods Homogeneous Perfect 3. Perfect/Imperfect information Free 4. Free/Restricted entry and exit

  10. Violation of conditions • The market with only one seller is a _________. • The market dominated by a few large sellers is an __________. • The market with a large number of small sellers but selling heterogeneous goods or having imperfect information is a ______________________. monopoly oligopoly monopolistic competition (Options: monopolistic competition / oligopoly / monopoly)

  11. Demand and Revenue Curves of a Price-taker

  12. $ d q 0 Demand curve A price-taker cannot influence the market price. The price is a constant irrespective of its quantity supplied. What is the shape of its demand curve? • The demand curve faced by a price-taker is ___________ at the prevailing market price. horizontal (Options: vertical / horizontal)

  13. Q9.2: “As the demand curve faced by a price-taker is horizontal, the market demand curve, which is the horizontal sum of all individual demand curves, must also be horizontal.” Discuss.

  14. $ MR = AR q 0 MR and AR curve A price-taker cannot influence the market price. What will be the shape of its MR curve & AR curve? horizontal • Its MR curve and AR curve are __________at the prevailing market price. • They coincidewith the demand curve. (Options: vertical / horizontal) = d

  15. Equilibrium of a Wealth-maximizing Firm

  16. $ MC Loss Loss MR Gain q 0 q* q’ • Output between q’and q*: • MR > MC • Wealth  in producing them • Output beyond q*: • MR < MC • Wealth  in producing them • Output below q’: • MR < MC • Loss incurred Derivation:

  17. $ MC Loss Loss MR q 0 Gain Wealth-maximizing output q* q’ Equilibrium conditions 1. MR = MC 2. MC curve cuts MR curve from below 3. In the short run, AR  AVC and in the long run, AR LRAC

  18. Q9.3: (a) At q*, MR = MC. The marginal gain is zero. Explain why it is wealth-maximizing. (b) At q’, MR = MC. Explain why it is not wealth-maximizing. (c) In the short run, if ATC > AR > AVC, explain why the output is still worth to be produced.

  19. Short-run Model

  20. $ MC ATC^ Suspend production ATC AVC^ AVC P^ q 0 q^ Wealth-maximizing output level at a pricebelow AVC Thelossif suspend production = TFC = AFC^ x q^ = (ATC^ -AVC^) x q^ D^= MR^=AR^

  21. $ MC Produce atq0 ATC AVC d0 = MR0 = AR0 q 0 Wealth-maximizing output level at a price equal to AVC The lossif produce at q0 = TFC = AFC0 x q0 = (ATC0 -AVC0) x q0 ATC0 P0= AVC0 q0

  22. $ MC ATC Produce atq1 ATC1 d1 = MR1 =AR1 P1 AVC AVC1 q 0 q1 Wealth-maximizing output level at aprice above AVC but below ATC The lossif produce at q1 < TFC

  23. $ MC d2 = MR2 = AR2 Produce atq2 P2 ATC ATC2 AVC AVC2 q 0 q2 Wealth-maximizing output level at a price above ATC The net receiptif produce at q2

  24. $ Supply Curve ATC AVC P0 q 0 q0 Short run supply curve of a price-taker • For P < min. AVC, Qs = 0 units. The supply curve coincides with the y-axis. • For P > min. AVC, the supply curve coincides with the MC curve.

  25. P P P S sa sb P1 P1 P1 0 qa1 qa 0 qb 0 Q qb1 Q1 Firm a Firm b Market Short run market supply curve of a price-taking industry … + …

  26. $ S P* D 0 Q Q* Determination of the equilibrium price The equilibrium price is determined by the intersection point of the market demand and the market supply curves.

  27. Long-run Model

  28. q Long run adjustment 1. Producing at the output where MR equates LRMC • MR = LRMC $ LRMC LRAC • LRMC curve cuts MR curve from below P MR=AR • AR  LRAC q 0

  29. $ LRMC Positive Net Receipt LRAC P’ MR’=AR’ q 0 q’ 2. Entry and exit until zero net receipt and production at the optimum scale are attained • At q’ (MR = LRMC)AR’ > LRAC’ • Positivenet receipt   • New firms enterS & P

  30. Negative Net Receipt $ • At q’’ (MR = LRMC)AR’’ < LRAC’’ LRMC LRAC • Negative net receipt  MR’’=AR’’ P’’  • Some firms leave. • S  & P q 0 q’’

  31. q* • At q* (MR = LRMC),AR* = LRAC* $ LRMC LRAC* • Zero net receipt P* • No entry nor exit MR*=AR* Long run equilibrium q 0

  32. Long run market supply curve • In the long-run equilibrium, • P always equates the minimum LRAC.

  33. Long run market supply curve • The long-run market supply curve (relating P to Q) is actually relating • the minimum LRAC to Q.

  34. Long run market supply curve • According to the relationship between LRAC and Q, • threekindsof long-run market supply curves can be derived: 1. constant-cost 2. decreasing-cost 3. increasing-cost

  35. $ q 0 Long-run market supply curve S1:Increasing-cost industry S2: Constant-cost industry S3: Decreasing-cost industry

  36. P LRAC P* D Q 0 qs Qd Number of firms in a price-taking market Number of identical firms in the industry = Qd/qs

  37. Q9.6: After an increase in market demand, predict what would happen to a price-taking industry in both the short run and the long run – number of firms, price, quantity supplied and net receipt.

  38. Efficiency & Price-taking Market

  39. Pareto efficiency • Pareto optimalityor efficiency is attained if • it is impossible to reallocate resourcesto make an individual gain (better off) • without making other individuals lose (worse off)

  40. Pareto efficiency • Inefficiencyoccurs if • it ispossibleto reallocate resources to make an individual gain (better off) without making other individuals lose (worse off).

  41. Allocation of resources involves three basic economic problems: 1. what to produce? 2. how to produce? 3. for whom to produce?

  42. Correspondingly, three efficiency conditions are defined: 1. production efficiency 2. consumption efficiency 3. allocative efficiency

  43. 1. Production efficiency – defining the criterion of “how to produce” • Production efficiency is attained when • goods are produced at the minimum cost. • then, it will be impossible to raise the output of any goodwithout reducing the outputs of others.

  44. Conditions of production efficiency (production at the minimum cost): • All firms usecost-minimizing production methodsto produce. • MCs of all firms producing the same good are equal. Why?

  45. 2.Consumption efficiency – defining the criterion of “for whom to produce” • Consumption efficiency is attained when • goods are consumed by individualswith the highest MUV. • then, it will be impossible to raise TUV of any individualwithout reducing TUVs of others.

  46. Conditions of consumption efficiency (consumption by individuals with the highest MUV): • MUVsof all individuals consuming the same goodsare equal. Why?

  47. 3. Allocative efficiency – defining the criterion of “what to produce” • Allocative efficiency is attained when • resources are allocated to their highest-valued uses. • then, it will beimpossible to raise the TUV of all the commodities produced.

  48. Conditions to achieve allocative efficiency (allocated to the highest-valued uses): • MUVof each good isequal to itsMC Why?

  49. Situation in a price-taking industry: Behaviours of producers • To maximize wealth, firms have to minimize cost. So they must use the cost-minimizing production methodsin their production. • To maximize wealth, firms produce the output at which MC = MR = P. As they face the same price, MCs of all firms producing the same good are equal. Production efficiency is achieved.

  50. Situation in price-taking industry: Behaviours of consumers • To maximize utility, individuals consume the amount at which MUV = P. • As individuals face the same market price, MUVs of all individuals consuming the same good are equal. Consumption efficiency is also achieved.

More Related