

1 ) *3.5 Assume that you are employed as an analyst at an interna- tional consulting...
Assume that you are employed as an analyst at an international consulting firm. Your latest assignment is to do an industry analysis of the fast-growing "telemonica" industry. After extensive research on this combination cell phone and harmonica, you have obtained the following information: • • Long-run costs: Capital costs: $40 per unit of output Labor costs: $25 per unit of output ¦ No economies or diseconomies of scale ¦ Industry currently earning a normal return to capital (profit of zero)...
The first picture below depicts the cost curves for a
representative firm in this perfectly competitive industry.
Initially, there are 100 firms. The second picture depicts market
demand.
A) Suppose that the firm produces 300 units of output, how much
are their total costs?
B) What is the short-run equilibrium price?
C) At the short-run equilibrium price, what is the quantity
produced by each firm?
D) At the short-run equilibrium price, what is per-firm
profit?
E) In the long-run,...
1. (18pts) Suppose there are 100 firms in a perfectly competitive industry. Short run marginal costs for each firm are given by SMC = q + 2 and market demand is given by Qd = 1000-20P (5pts) Calculate the short run equilibrium price and quantity for each firm.. b. (3pts) Suppose each firm has a U-shaped, long-run average cost curve that reaches a minimum of $10. Calculate the long run equilibrium price and the total industry output.. (4pts) What is...
Problem 1. (13 points) Markets: Perfect Competition. Assume that a perfectly competitive, constant cost industry is in a long run equilibrium with 35 firms. Each firm is producing 90 units of output which it sells at the price of $39 per unit; out of this amount each firm is paying $5 tax per unit of the output. The government decides to decrease the tax, so the firms will be paying $3 tax per unit. a) Explain what would happen in...
4 The black lines on the graph show the unit cost curves of a representative firm in a constant cost competitive industry The black supply and demand curve shows the market for the good in equilibrium at a price P Suppose the price of labor drops. Unit Cost Curves of a Representative Firm $per unit Market Supply and Demand MC MC2 ATC, 100 Ems IC Demand Select all that apply After the price of labor drops, at the price P1...
In a monopolistically competitive market: There are few firms, each producing a very differentiated product. There is one firm that produces a standardized product. There are many firms producing a differentiated product. There are market participants who are all price takers. In a perfectly competitive model all the following are assumed, except: patents and copyrights that serve as barriers to entry into the industry. a large number of buyers. standardized product. easy entry to and exit from the market. In...
Suppose a firm doubles the amount of all of its factors of production and, as a result, output increases from 100 to 300 units. This firm is operating under Increasing cost Decreasing costs Long-run decreasing returns Decreasing total cost Diseconomies of scales Positive economic profit is The excess of revenues over implicit costs A signal for firms in other industries to expand their output A signal for resources to enter the industry in the long run The excess of revenues...
Consider the following two graphs for a product produced in a perfectly competitive market (think, for example, corn or oats). The graph on top shows the market supply and demand functions for this product. The one at the bottom is the cost curves for a typical firm in the industry producing this product. These cost curves pertain to long run. As you know, in the long run firms can change the amounts of invested capital, new firms can enter the...
For a constant cost industry in which all firms the same cost functions, their long-run average cost is minimized at $10 per unit output and 20 units (i.e. q = 20). Market demand is given by QD=DP=1,500-50P. Find the long-run market supply function Find the long-run equilibrium price (P*), market quantity (Q*), firm output (q*), number of firms (n), and each firm’s profit. The short-run total cost function associated with each firm’s long-run costs is SCq=0.5q2-10q+200. Calculate the short-run average...
TRUE OR FALSE TF DO 1. In a price-taker market, all firms produce an identical product and each firm comprises only a very small portion of the total market. 2. If a price-taker firm wants to sell its output, it must accept the market price, but it can sell as much output as it wishes at that market price. O N 3. For a price-taker firm, its marginal revenue from the sale of an addi- tional unit is generally less...