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The Theory of the Firm under Perfect Competition

🎓 Class 12📖 Introductory Microeconomics📖 10 notes🧠 4 Q&A⏱️ ~15 min

The Theory of the Firm under Perfect CompetitionStudy Notes

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The Theory of the Firm under Perfect Competition

Explanation

The Theory of the Firm under Perfect Competition

This chapter focuses on understanding how a firm decides the quantity of output to produce in a perfectly competitive market. Unlike the previous chapter, which dealt with production functions and cost curves, here the emphasis is on the firm's decision-making process to maximize profit. The fundamental assumption is that a firm is a ruthless profit maximizer, meaning it chooses the output level that yields the highest possible profit. It is also assumed that the firm sells all the output it produces, so the terms 'output' and 'quantity sold' are used interchangeably. The chapter is structured to first analyze the profit maximization problem of a firm, then derive the firm's supply curve, and finally aggregate individual supply curves to obtain the market supply curve. This approach helps to understand firm behavior and market outcomes under perfect competition.

  • Focus on firm's decision on output quantity to maximize profit.
  • Assumption: firm is a ruthless profit maximizer.
  • Output produced equals quantity sold.
  • Chapter covers profit maximization, supply curve derivation, and market supply aggregation.
  • Distinguishes this chapter's focus from production and cost analysis in the previous chapter.
  • 📌 Profit maximization: The process by which a firm chooses output to maximize the difference between total revenue and total cost.
  • 📌 Output: Quantity of goods produced and sold by the firm.

4.1 PERFECT COMPETITION: DEFINING FEATURES

Explanation

4.1 PERFECT COMPETITION: DEFINING FEATURES

Perfect competition is a market structure characterized by several defining features that shape firm and buyer behavior. First, the market has a large number of buyers and sellers, making each individual participant very small relative to the market size. This ensures no single buyer or seller can influence the market price. Second, each firm produces a homogeneous product, meaning the product from one firm is indistinguishable from that of another. Third, there is free entry and exit of firms in the market, allowing firms to join or leave the market without restrictions. Fourth, perfect information exists, meaning all buyers and sellers are fully aware of prices, product quality, and other relevant market details. These features collectively lead to the key characteristic of perfect competition: price-taking behavior. Firms and buyers accept the market price as given; firms cannot charge above it without losing all customers, and buyers cannot pay less than the market price or they will not find sellers. This behavior arises because products are identical and buyers know the market price, so any deviation by a firm leads to losing all sales. The presence of many firms ensures that buyers switching from one firm to another causes no adjustment problems in demand. Thus, the price-taking assumption is reasonable and fundamental to the analysis of perfect competition.

  • Large number of buyers and sellers ensures no individual market power.
  • Firms produce homogeneous products, indistinguishable across sellers.
  • Free entry and exit maintain market competitiveness and number of firms.
  • Perfect information allows all participants to know prices and product details.
  • Price-taking behavior: firms and buyers accept market price without influence.
  • Price-taking arises because charging above market price leads to zero sales.
  • 📌 Perfect competition: A market structure with many buyers and sellers, homogeneous products, free entry and exit, and perfect information.
  • 📌 Price taker: A firm or buyer who accepts the market price as given and cannot influence it.

4.2 REVENUE

Explanation

4.2 REVENUE

In a perfectly competitive market, a firm is a price taker and sells its output at the market price p. Since the firm can sell any quantity at this price, it has no incentive to set a price lower than p. The firm's total revenue (TR) is the product o

Practice QuestionsThe Theory of the Firm under Perfect Competition

Includes NCERT exercise questions with answers

Q1.Product differentiation is a distinguishing feature of which form of market
A.Monopoly
B.Oligopoly
C.Perfect competition
D.Monopolistic competition

Answer:

Monopolistic competition

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Q2.What is the nature of the demand curve in the case of Monopolistic competition?
A.Perfectly elastic
B.Downward sloping and less elastic
C.Downward sloping and more elastic
D.Intermediate demand curve

Answer:

Downward sloping and more elastic

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Q3.The demand for a perfectly competitive market form is a horizontal straight line parallel to the x-axis. It happens because:
A.Selling cost is zero
B.There is a freedom of entry and exit
C.The firm is a price-taker
D.None of the above

Answer:

The firm is a price-taker

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Q4.How much selling cost is incurred in the case of perfect competition?
A.Very high
B.Very Less
C.Negligible
D.Zero

Answer:

Zero

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