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Many buyers and sellers




P-Competition

Long run equilibrium

Economic strategies of the firm in P-competitive market

Firm and industry demand in P-competitive market

Economic profit in TRTC-model and in MRMC-model

P- Competition

Different market forms

 

To begin with let’s just think about just what a market is. A market consists of all the (potential ) buyers and sellers of a particular good or service.

In order for a market to exist, though, these potential buyers and sellers must have some way to communicate offers to buy and sell with one another. Thus, it is natural to identify a market with the place where traders come together (as in the case of a stock market) or the means by which they communicate.

One possibility is for them to come together and yell at one another (as at the New York Stock Exchange). In traditional societies, craftsmen in a particular trade may all be located on the same street, so that customers know where to go to buy. Of course, many modern markets make use of a wide range of electronic communication methods, as do NASDAQ and the international currency markets.

To sum it up if we talk about a market we always mention the following things:

- buyers, sellers;

- commodity;

- price setting;

- forms of competition.

All this characteristics may vary for different markets. At the same time it could be similarities for some markets. This is the ground to construct some ideal model of the market. These models are called forms of markets ( other name types of market structures).

Economists in general recognize four major types of market:

· "Perfect Competition"

· Monopoly

· Oligopoly

· Monopolistic competition

What many economists call "Perfect Competition" is an idealized model of the market (structure of an industry) in which price competition is dominant – in fact the only form of competition possible. The terminology "Perfect Competition" is quite common but not quite universal. The term "Pure Competition" is also sometimes used.

A P-Competitive structure is defined by four characteristics. For an industry to have a P-competitive structure, it must have all four of these characteristics:

The idea is that the sellers and buyers are small relative to the size of the market, so that no one of them can "fix the price." If there are "many small sellers," it makes it much harder for any seller or any group of sellers to "rig the price". Similarly, if there are "many small buyers," there is little opportunity for buyers to "rig the price" in their own favor. Each seller reasons as follows: "If I try to charge a price above the market price, my customers will know that they can get a better price from my competitors. Thus, the seller treats the price as being given and determined by "the forces of the market" independently of her own output.

This has given us a start on understanding of the demand on the P-competition market. From the Figure we can see, that the demand curve for a P-Competitive firm is a horizontal line corresponding to the going price. And that makes sense, because the price in a P-Competitive market is determined by supply and demand – not by the seller or the buyer.

The seller has no control over the price, it means that the price is given – a constant, a horizontal line – from the point of view of the seller.

The second important thing here is equality – MR=D=p. Every additional unit of production adds to total revenue the same amount of money – its price.

So, the first basic characteristics of P-Competition is many sellers. How many sellers? How small? There is no absolute answer to that question; but there must be enough sellers and they must each be small enough so that each regards the price as being determined by the market, so that none of the sellers sees any opportunity to push the price up by cutting back on his or her output.

Similarly, there must be enough buyers, and each small enough, that each one treats the price as being determined by the market, and beyond her or his own ability to influence.




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