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fectly competitive painted necktie industry has a large number of potential entrants. Each firm has an identical cost structure such that long-run average cost is minimized at an output of 20 units. The minimum average cost is $10 per unit. Total market d
A perfectly competitive industry consists of many identical firms, each with a long-run average total cost of LATC = 800 – 10Q + 0.1Q2 and long-run marginal cost of LMC = 800 – 20Q + 0.3Q2. Identify the region of economies of scale and diseconomies of scale.
A perfectly competitive industry consists of many identical firms, each with a long-run average total cost of LATC = 800 – 10Q + 0.1Q2 and long-run marginal cost of LMC = 800 – 20Q + 0.3Q2. Identify the region of economies of scale and diseconomies of scale.
a typical long-run average cost a firm in the perfectly competitive widget market reaches its minimum average cost at $35/unit at 10,000 units. draw the long-run market supply curve. assume that factor prices do not chang as the industry expands or contracts
The typical long-run average cost a firm in the perfectly competitive widget market reaches its minimum average cost at $35/unit at 10,000 units. Draw the long-run market supply curve. Assume that factor prices do not change as the industry expands or contracts.
Consider a perfectly competitive market with many identical firms. Each firm has a long-run marginal cost function given by LRMC(y) = y ^2 + 1. We do not know the firms’ LRAT C function, but we know that at a quantity of 3 it is equal to LRMC. In other words: LRAT C(3) = LRMC(3). (a) Find an expression for an individual firm’s long-run inverse supply curve: this will be p as a function of y. Note that it will...
1. Each firm in a perfectly competitive industry has the long-run total cost function c(y) = 3y - (y^2/3) + (y^3/27) Demand is given by the inverse demand curve p = 15 - (Qd/600). Calculate, for the long-run equilibrium, a. The price b.The market quantity c. The number of firms d. The profit for each firm
A firm in a perfectly competitive industry faces the following long run total cost schedule: Perfect Competition Quantity 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 Total Cost 50 100 140 160 240 360 600 750 Given this data, we would expect the long run price of the product to be about: A. None of the above B. $15 C. $20 D. $22 E. $25
If long run equilibrium price in a perfectly competitive market is $20 per unit. If government imposes a $18 per unit price ceiling and firms continue to produce a positive level of output, this implies that for firms after the price ceiling: a) Average total cost is lower than $18 b) Average fixed cost is lower than $18 c)Marginal cost is lower than average variable cost. d)Average variable cost is lower than $18
Suppose all firms in the market are identical. Each firm has a long run total cost curve LTC = 40Q – Q2 + 0.01Q3. The market demand curve is Q = 20,000 – 100P. Find the long run equilibrium quantity per firm, price, and number of firms in the market.
Each firm in a perfectly competitive market has long run average cost represented as AC(q) = 100q- 10+100/q. Long run marginal cost is MC=200q-10. The market demand is Qd = 2150-5P. Find the long run equilibrium output per firm, q*, the long run equilibrium price, P*, and the number of firms in the industry, n*. P = 190; Q = 1200; q =1 , n = 1200