Costs of Production
PERFECT COMPETITION
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
OLIGOPOLY
MONOPOLY
100

Economists use this term for costs that do not require a money payment but represent the value of foregone opportunities.

What are implicit costs?

100

Two characteristics of Perfect Competition

1) many buyers and sellers, 2) all firms selling identical products 3) no or low barriers to entry 4) price takers 

100

Two characteristics of Monopolistic Competition. 

1) Lots of buyers and Sellers 2)No or low barriers to entry 3)Differentiated Products (similar but different) 4)Downward sloping demand curve 

100

Two characteristics of Oligopolies.  

1) Lots of buyers but few sellers 2)high barriers to entry 3)Uniform or similar Product  4)Firms behave strategically

100

Two characteristics of Monopolies. 

1)only one producer of a good or service 2)unique product 3)high barriers to entry prevent competition 4)a single producer faces the entire downward sloping demand curve 5)"price maker

200

q * (P - ATC) --> Quantity multiplied by the difference between Price and Average Total Cost

What is the formula for profit?

200

These firms can sell as much as they want at the current market price, but cannot sell anything at all if they raise the price.

What are firms in perfectly competitive markets?

or What are "price takers?"

200

This is the relationship between price and marginal revenue for a monopolistic competitor.

What is price is greater than marginal revenue (P > MR)?

200

This game theory model explains why oligopolists may not cooperate, even when it's in their best interest.

What is the prisoner's dilemma?

200

Patents, Copyrights and Trademarks

What are government barriers to entry?

300

ΔTR / Δq -->change in total revenue divided by change in quantity

What is the formula for MR (Marginal Revenue)?

300

What is the profit maximizing level of output?

The quantity where MC is equal to MR

300

This key feature distinguishes monopolistic competition from perfect competition, allowing firms to have some price-setting power.

What is product differentiation?

300

When firms in an oligopoly act independently and pursue only their own self-interest, they typically end up in this type of outcome, where no firm has an incentive to unilaterally change strategy.

What is a Nash equilibrium?

300

Monopolies are considered inefficient because they create this kind of loss in total welfare.

What is deadweight loss?

400

Because firms can freely enter and exit the market, long-run profits in perfect competition always equal this value.

What is zero economic profit?

400

This is what always occurs when economic profits exist in the short run in perfectly competitive markets.

What is the entry of firms?

400

Firms in monopolistic competition often use this strategy to create perceived differences between products and build brand loyalty.

What is advertising?

400

A strategy that is the best for a firm, no matter what strategies other firms use?

What is a dominant strategy?

400

For a monopolist, marginal revenue is always ___ than the price of the product.

What is less?





500

In the short run, a perfectly competitive firm will continue to operate as long as price covers this average cost.

What is average variable cost?

500

If a firm is producing where Price (MR) = MC AND = min ATC

What is earning zero economic profits?

500

In long-run equilibrium, a monopolistically competitive firm produces at an output level where average total cost is not minimized, creating this inefficiency.

What is excess capacity?

500

This is the term for an agreement among firms in an oligopoly to coordinate actions that will limit output or keep prices high.

What is collusion?

500

The following; telecommunications networks, oil & gas companies, water, sewer & waste management, electric power supply & grids.

What are examples of natural monopolies?

M
e
n
u