basic terms revenue = income from sales ($ in) cost = an expense ($ out) profit = revenue – cost...
TRANSCRIPT
Basic Terms
• Revenue = income from sales ($ in)
• Cost = an expense ($ out)
• Profit = Revenue – Cost
• Marginal = Additional from One Unit
Perfect Competition Long Run Economic Profit = Zero• Accounting Profit=
Total Revenue -Total Explicit Costs
Explicit Costs= direct payments made to others
examples= rent, utilities, wages, materials
Long Run Economic Profit = Zero
• Economic Profit= Total Revenue -Total Explicit/Implicit Costs
Implicit Costs= opportunity cost/ “profit” required to keep entrepreneur from “exiting” the market
examples= using land and equipment to grow wheat instead of corn
Long Run Economic Profit = Zero
• Economic Profit > Zero– Firms will “enter” the market in the long run
• Economic Profit < Zero– Firms will “exit” the market in the long run
Monopolistic Competition v. Oligopoly
Considerations:
# of Firms
Market Dominance
Geographic Area
Barriers to Entry
Monopolistic Competition v. Oligopoly
Do the decisions of one firm greatly affect the others firms in the market?
Do the decisions of one firm have little/no impact on the market?
Monopolistic Competition v. Oligopoly
A Dividing Line
4 Largest Firms control over 40% of the market
Barriers to Entry
Think!
DeBeers
Walmart
Coca-Cola
Keurig K-Cups
Liquor Store (in PA)
Continental Airlines
• Capital Cost
• Customer Loyalty
• Control of Resources
• Economies of Scale
• Legal– Patents, copyrights– Government regulation, licensing
Barriers to Entry
Barriers to Entry
Think!
DeBeers
Walmart
Coca-Cola
Keurig K-Cups
Waste Management
Continental Airlines
• Capital Cost
• Customer Loyalty
• Control of Resources
• Economies of Scale
• Legal– Patents, copyrights– Government regulation, licensing
Barriers to Entry
• Algeria • Angola • Ecuador • Iran • Iraq • Kuwait • Libya • Nigeria • Qatar • Saudi Arabia • United Arab Emirates • Venezuela
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
Antitrust Laws• Sherman Antitrust Act (1890)
– Banned predatory and unfair business practices
• Clayton Antitrust Act (1914)– Specified unfair practices
• Interlocking Directories• Price Discrimination• Exclusive Dealings and Tying• Mergers to Destroy Competition
• Federal Trade Commission (FTC)– Approves mergers and enforces trade regulations