Topic7 Market Structure Student
Topic7 Market Structure Student
MARKET STRUCTURE
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DEFINITIONS
Firm : an institution that buys or hires FOPs and
organizes them to produce and sell goods and services.
Objectives :
Conventional perspective :
1. Minimize cost and maximize profits.
2. Pay taxes
3. Corporate Social responsibilities(CSR) : charitable
activities, sponsorships, provide scholarships, etc
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• Objectives :
Islamic perspective :
Overall objective is to seek mardhatillah and
al falah through :
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1. Production of halal goods
2. Minimizing cost and reasonable profits.
3. Paying zakat and taxes
4. Corporate Social responsibilities(CSR) :
charitable activities, sponsorships, provide
scholarships, etc
MARKET STRUCTURE
Industry : A group of firms producing the
same goods and services
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C) Marginal Revenue
It is an additional unit of income
received by a producer after selling
additional (one unit) of product.
FORMULA: MR = ΔTR/ΔQ
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ANALYSIS OF REVENUE
• Split the market structure into 2 categories:
10 1
10 2
10 3
10 4
10 5
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DIAGRAM:
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TABLE: MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
AND MONOPOLY
P Q TR AR MR
10 1
9 2
8 3
7 4
6 5
4 6
3 7
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DIAGRAM:
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PERFECT MARKET
• Perfect Competition is a market consists of
large number of sellers(small firms)
• selling identical products,
• easy entry(no barriers) for the new firms to
join the market causes it to have no control
over price . As a result the price is constant
which is the determined by the industry.
• Perfect Competition is a price taker.
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IMPERFECT MARKET
• Imperfect Markets consist of Monopolistic
Competition, Monopoly and Oligopoly
• The common characteristic is that control
over price in which from little control (MC) to
most powerful(Monopoly).
• As a result the price is not constant, i.e. The
higher the price the less goods sold
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CONCEPT OF PROFIT MAXIMIZATION
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TOTAL/AGGREGATE
APPROACH
The use of total cost and total revenue
Profit = TR – TC
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TR – TC APPROACH (PERFECT COMPETITION)
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PROFIT MAXIMIZATION IN IMPERFECT COMPETITION (MONOPOLISTIC
COMPETITION/MONOPOLY)
• TR – TC approach
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MARGINAL APPROACH
The usage of MR and MC curves
Intersection of MR and MC curves is
equilibrium condition
Profit is MAXIMUM when:
i) MR = MC (E, equilibrium)
ii) From E find Q
iii) From E find the AR(Price)
iv) From E find the AC
iv) Profit = TR – TC
= (AR X Q)-(AC X Q)
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MC – MR APPROACH-
(PERFECT COMPETITION)
Quantity (Q) P (RM) TR AR MR TC MC
1 10 10
2 10 26
3 10 29
4 10 31
5 10 34
6 10 40
7 10 49
8 10 60
9 10 74
10 10 90
DIAGRAM:
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MC – MR APPROACH-(MONOPOLY/
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION)
Quantity (Q) P (RM) TR AR MR TC MC
1 10 10 10
2 9 18 15
3 8 24 19
4 7 28 22
5 6 30 24
6 5 30 27
7 4 28 31
8 3 24 36
9 2 18 42
10 1 10 49
DIAGRAM:
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PROFIT MAXIMIZATION IN THE
SHORT RUN
• 3 TYPES OF PROFIT
* Super Normal Profit (economic profit)
AR > AC
* Normal Profit (breakeven)
AR = AC
* Subnormal Profit (loss)
AR < AC
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PERFECT COMPETITION
Supernormal Profit
P/Costs
MC
AC
5 P=Dd=AR=MR
100 Q
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CALCULATION
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PERFECT COMPETITION
Normal Profit
P/Costs
MC
AC
5 P=Dd=AR=MR
100 Q
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CALCULATION
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PERFECT COMPETITION
Subnormal Profit
P/Costs
MC AC
5 P=Dd=AR=MR
Q
100
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CALCULATION
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MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION /
MONOPOLY
Supernormal Profit
P/Costs
MC
AC
P=Dd=AR
MR
50 Q
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CALCULATION
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MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION /
MONOPOLY
Normal Profit
P/Costs
MC
AC
P=Dd=AR
MR
50 Q
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CALCULATION
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MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION /
MONOPOLY
Subnormal Profit
MC
P/Costs
AC
P=Dd=AR
MR
50 Q
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CALCULATION
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SHUT DOWN POINT IN THE
SHORT RUN
7 AVC
5 P=Dd=AR=MR
100 Q
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PERFECT COMPETITION
a) If price fall below RM5, the firm will shut down its
operation because losses are grater than fixed cost.
Shut down MC
AC
Cost
AVC
7
P=Dd=AR=MR
100 Q
50
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION /
MONOPOLY
a) Continue production/shut down point
MC
Costs
AC
7
AVC
5
P=Dd=AR
MR
50 Q
51
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MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION /
MONOPOLY
b) Shut down MC
Costs
AC
7 AVC
P=Dd=AR
MR
50 Q
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PROFIT MAXIMIZATION IN THE
LONG RUN
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If in the short run firms in an industry is
making a SUPER NORMAL profit, due to
easy entry this will attract more firms to enter
the market, the size will get larger and finally
in the long run the profit shared by them will
fall until each of them will only receive a
NORMAL PROFIT. (effect of entry)
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• Effect of exit
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DIAGRAM:
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION LONG RUN PROFIT
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Monopoly
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PRICE DISCRIMINATION
(A PRACTICE OF MONOPOLY)
Price discrimination is the selling of goods or
services of given quality at different price to
different buyers.
There are three types of price discrimination:
(i) First Degree
occurs when a firm charges a different price
for a unit sold and charges each consumer the
maximum price that he is willing to pay for
each unit.
Example : auction
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(ii) Second Degree
Occurs when a products are grouped into
blocks and each block is charged at a different
price.
Example: bus fare, cinema ticket.
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a) Seller must be a monopolist
Diagram :
AC
MC
MR= ARpc
ARm
MR m
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i) Price & Quantity
ii) Efficiency
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SWEEZY’S MODEL
• Oligopolist faces two demand curves
a firm’ s demand curve : dd
an industry’s demand curve : DD
d D
dd is elastic
DD is inelastic
d
D
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SWEEZY’S MODEL
Used to explain the kinked demand curve and
price rigidity in the oligopoly model
(mutual interdependence between firms)
Assumptions:
1. If the firm were to increase its price, other firms
will not follow (demand curve is elastic) in order
to gain the market share
2. If the firm were to reduce price, other firms will
follow to avoid losing the market share
(demand curve is inelastic)
• As a result the demand curve for
oligopoly consists of dd (higher price)
and DD (lower price) known as
KINKED DEMAND CURVE.
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KINKED DEMAND CURVE MODEL
MC2
E MC1
P*
b D=AR
Q*
MR
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• To maximize profit : MR =MC
• Between a-b gap :
- fluctuation of MC does not effect the equilibrium
price or quantity.
- therefore MC is between MC1 to MC2, price
and
quantity remain constant ( P* and Q*)
-This explain the price rigidity.
E AC
26 MC
24
22
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20 a
10 b P=Dd= AR
MR
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a) The equilibrium output is _______ units and
the equilibrium price is RM _______.
b) The oligopoly’s model is known as __________
c) State two assumptions on the kinked demand
curve.
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