A market structure with one seller and many buyers.
A market structure with many sellers and buyers.
A market structure with few sellers and many buyers.
A market structure with many sellers and differentiated products.
Monopoly
Perfect competition
Monopoly
Monopolistic competition
Oligopoly
Many buyers and many sellers.
The goods are homogenious.
Free entry or exit of the market.
Perfect information.
Firms are pice-takers and the market determines the price.
The firm perceives a constant price in the increase of quantity demanded (horizontal line).
It is the result obtained by TR - TC, with TR = p.q.
By looking at the total profit (TR - TC) or by the marginal analyse (MP = MR-MC).
The additional revenue obtained by selling one more unit.
The cost obtained by selling one more unit.
The profit obtained by selling one more unit, being the result of the subtraction MR - MC.
In perfect competition.
By the formula: max. TII = TR -TC.
To expand output as long as MR is smaller or equal to MC.
In perfect competition, people will enter the market as long as there is economic profit. This will result in the equilibrium price decrease and will end up till TP = 0.
No.
By drawing a marginal cost curve, in which every point of the supply curve is the point where MC crosses with MR (MC = MR = p) for different prices (above shutdown point in the short run and point of entry and exist in the long run).
Only 1 seller and many buyers.
Good: 1, with no close substitutes.
Barriers to entry.
The firm is the price maker.
Legal barriers (patents, copyright, franchises).
Economic barriers (natural barriers, economies of scale).
government created monopolies.
Control over an essential resource.
Deliberate (illegal) barriers (mafia type ruling over the territory and having on restaurant to reduce competitors).
Anti-trust laws (decides if a monopoly will occur or not).
Regulation by the government.
Ownership (own a monopoly in public sector, so higher prices will not affect the people).
Many buyers and mand sellers.
Goods are differentiated (considered heteregious but with very close substitutes).
Free entry or exit.
Firms are price makers (own a degree of market power).
Advertising.
Brand names.
Product improvement.
In order to sell at a higher price.
The elasticity of the demand curve: monopoly (inelastic) to oligopoly (more elastic) to MP (more more elastic).
Few sellers and many buyers.
Goods are homogenious (petrol) or differentiated (cars).
Difficult entry and exit.
Firms are price makers (share a higher degree of market power).
Mutual interdependence.
Collusions.
Price leadership.
Incentives to cheat.
It's an agreement between firms to determine a common price and quantities to produce in the market (price fixing).
Yes, it's an explicit collusion.
Tacit collusion happens without a formal written agreement, whereas explicit collusion involves direct formal agreements.
A form of collusion in which many sellers follow the price charges instituted by one seller.
Antitrust laws.
Regulation.
Sanction on collusions (punishment).