(6-5) /5 (131-131) /131 1 0 or Simply Alpha or Infinity Symbol
(6-5) /5 (131-131) /131 1 0 or Simply Alpha or Infinity Symbol
= (6-5)/5
(131-131)/131
= 1
Curves:
Total revenue (TR):A straight line that slopes upward to the right. Its slope is
constant because each extra unit of sales increases TR by price.
Demand curve ( D):Horizontal, indicating perfect price elasticity.
Marginalrevenue (MR) curve:Coincides with the demand curve because the
product price (and hence MR) is constant.
Average revenue (AR) curve: Equals price and therefore also coincides with the
demand curve.
The short run is the concept that, within a certain period in the future, at least one input is fixed
while others are variable. AR = P = MR
Q = TR
Purely competitive firm cannot attempt to maximize its profit by raising or lowering the
price it charges.
The only variable that the firm can control is its output. As a result, the purely
competitive firm attempts to maximize its economic profit (or minimize itseconomic loss) by
adjusting its output through changes in the amount of variable resources (materials, labor) it
uses.
MR = MC Rule: A method of determining the total output at which economic profit is at a maximum or
losses at a minimum.
3 Features
1. The rule applies only if producing is preferable to shutting down. We will show shortly that if
marginal revenue does not equal or exceed average variable cost, the firm will shut down rather
than produce the amount of output at which MR= MC.
2. The rule is an accurate guide to profit maximization for all firms whether they are purely
competitive, monopolistic, monopolistically competitive, or oligopolistic.
3. The rule can be restated as P = MC when applied to a purely competitive firm. Because the
demand schedule faced by a competitive seller is perfectly elastic at the going market price,
product price and marginal revenue are equal. So under pure competition (and only under pure
competition) we may substitute P for MR in the rule: When producing is preferable to shutting
down, the competitive firm that wants to maximize its profit or minimize its loss should produce
at that point where price equals marginal cost ( P = MC ).
Suppose now that the market yields a price of only $71. Should the firm produce? No, because at every
output level the firm’s average variable cost is greater than the price (compare columns 3 and 8 of the
table in Figure 8.4 ). The smallest loss it can incur by producing is greater than the $100 fixed cost it will
lose by shutting down (as shown by column 9). The best action is to shut down.
Marginal Cost and Short-Run Supply
Note that each of the MR (5 P) 5 MC intersection points labelled b, c, d and e in Figure 8.6
indicates a possible product price (on the vertical axis) and the corresponding quantity that the
firm would supply at that price (on the horizontal axis). Thus, points such as these are on the
upsloping supply curve of the competitive firm. Note, too, that quantity supplied would be zero
at any price below the minimum average variable cost (AVC).
Short-run supply curve: Solid segment of the marginal-cost curve MC. It tells us the amount of
output the firm will supply at each price in a series of prices.