The Production Function
Short Run and Long Run Production Costs
Profit Maximization
Firms’ Entry and Exit Decisions
Perfect Competition
100

What is the definition of the production function?

It shows the relationship between inputs and output in the production process.

100

What is the key difference between the short run and the long run in production?

In the short run, at least one input is fixed; in the long run, all inputs are variable.

100

What rule do firms follow to maximize profit?

They produce where MR = MC.

100

What condition must be met for a firm to earn a profit in the short run?

The firm earns a profit when P > ATC, meaning the price is higher than the average total cost per unit.

100

What are the four characteristics of perfect competition?

Many buyers and sellers, identical products, no barriers to entry, and price-taking firms.

200

What is the difference between total product and marginal product?

Total product is the total output produced, while marginal product is the additional output from adding one more unit of input.

200

What is the formula for average total cost (ATC)?

ATC = Total Cost / Quantity or ATC = AFC + AVC.

200

If total revenue is $500 and total cost is $400, what is the firm’s profit?

Profit = $100.

200

What is the break-even price for a firm?

The break-even price is where P = ATC, meaning the firm earns zero economic profit (normal profit).

200

Why do firms in perfect competition earn zero economic profit in the long run?

Entry and exit drive price to the point where P = ATC.

300

What is the law of diminishing marginal returns?

As more of a variable input is added to a fixed input, the additional output from each new unit of input eventually decreases.

300

What causes economies of scale in the long run?

Factors like specialization, bulk purchasing, and improved capital efficiency.

300

What is the difference between accounting profit and economic profit?

Economic profit includes opportunity costs while accounting profit does not.

300

Where is the shutdown price, and why is it important?

The shutdown price is where P = AVC because if price falls below average variable cost, the firm cannot cover variable costs and should shut down in the short run.

300

What does the demand curve look like for an individual firm in perfect competition?

Perfectly elastic, a horizontal line at the market price.

400

If the marginal product of labor is increasing, what happens to the total product curve?

It increases at an increasing rate.

400

What happens to marginal cost (MC) when the marginal product (MP) increases?

MC decreases.

400

How does a firm know whether to shut down in the short run?

If P < AVC, the firm should shut down.

400

How do you identify profit or loss on a cost curve graph?

Profit is the area between P and ATC when P > ATC, while loss is the area between ATC and P when P < ATC but P > AVC (firm stays open)

400

Why can’t a perfectly competitive firm influence the market price?

Because there are many firms, each producing an identical product.

500

What is the formula for the marginal product of labour?

MP = ΔTP / ΔL, where TP = total product and Q = labour.

500

Why does the long-run average total cost (LRATC) curve have a U-shape?

It initially declines due to economies of scale, flattens, and then increases due to diseconomies of scale.

500

What happens to total revenue if a perfectly competitive firm increases its price above the market equilibrium?

Total revenue drops to zero because no one buys from them.

500

What is the short-run supply curve of a firm?

It is the MC curve above AVC because firms only produce when P ≥ AVC; otherwise, they shut down.

500

What happens to a perfectly competitive firm’s output and profit if there is a temporary increase in market demand?

In the short run, the market price rises, leading to higher output and positive economic profit for firms. However, in the long run, new firms enter the market, increasing supply and driving price and profit back to zero economic profit (P = ATC)