Monopolistic Competition and Efficiency Recall that: • productive efficiency is P= min ATC • Allocative efficiency is P= MC I. A monopolistic competition industry has neither productive nor allocative efficiency A. Marginal revenue curve will never coincide with D=AR=P • in monopolistically competitive market‚ Demand is relatively elastic. Products are somewhat substitutable. B. Firms produce at a point where P>MC‚ meaning that resources are underallocated; not allocatively efficient
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EXERCISES FOR MICROECONOMICS TOPIC 1 Economics: An Introduction (Chapters 1 & 2 in the Textbook) EXPLAIN THE FOLLOWINGTERMS ◎ Average benefit ◎ Average cost ◎ Economic surplus ◎ Economics ◎ Microeconomics ◎ Macroeconomics ◎ Marginal benefit ◎ Marginal cost ◎ Normative economics ◎ Positive economics ◎ Rational person ◎ Sunk cost ◎ Opportunity cost ◎ Absolute advantage ◎ Comparative advantage ◎ Attainable point ◎ Unattainable point ◎ Efficient point ◎ Inefficient
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Assignment | Sajanpreet kaur Brar. | atmc | micro economics | ASSIGNMENT COVER SHEET (INDIVIDUAL) SUBJECT CODE: | BUECO 1507 | SUBJECT TITLE: | BUSINESS MICRO ECONOMICS | ASSIGNMENT NUMBER AND TITILE: | 1‚ COST CURVES‚ MONOPOLY‚ MICROECONOMICS REFORM. BUECO1507 (ECONOMICS ASSIGNMENT) Answer 1.) Cost Curves a.) The Marginal Cost (MC) - The increase in the cost that accompanies a unit increase in
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Perfect competition is a type of market structure where a large number of small firms producing identical products compete without any significant impact on prices or supply. There several factors which are followed in this particular model. Goods which are produced by the firms don’t have any product differentiation‚ in other words‚ they are homogenous and could substitutes each other in consumptions. As firms don’t have any market power and can’t influence prices due to their small size‚ rival
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1) Answer: a = Selena pays a storekeeper $1 for quart of milk. Storekeeper (revenue $1) -------Markets for Goods and Services--------Selena (spending $1) Goods sold Goods bought b = Stuart earns $4.50 per hour working at a fast-food restaurant. Factors of Production (labor) -------Markets for Factors of Production -------Stuart (labor) (Fast-food restaurant wage $4.50) Income ($4.50) c = Shanna spends $30 to get a haircut. Haircut salon (revenue $30) ---Markets for Goods
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Abdul Mukhyi‚ SE.‚ MM Economics is the social science that studies the production‚ distribution‚ and consumption of goods and services. Managerial economics (sometimes referred to as business economics)‚ is a branch of economics that applies microeconomic analysis to decision methods of businesses or other management units. As such‚ it bridges economic theory and economics in practice. It draws heavily from quantitative techniques such as regression analysis and correlation‚ Lagrangian calculus
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01DEFINE AND EXPLAIN A RANGE OF CORE ECO TERMS AND CONEPTS INCLUDING ECONOMIC SURPLUS OPP COST AND SUNK COST DEFINE AND EXPLAIN A RANGE OF CORE ECO TERMS AND CONEPTS INCLUDING ECONOMIC SURPLUS OPP COST AND SUNK COST CHAPTER !: THINKING LIKE AN ECONOMIST Scarcity principal: due to limited resources to satisfy unlimited wants‚ trade offs occur in terms of having more of one good and less of another Economic decision: any decision when securing something of value means going without something
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its relationship to certain microeconomic principles. Thesis: While Starbucks has been an industry leader in the specialty coffee market‚ rapid overexpansion and current economic conditions have caused it to lose its market dominance. Is the company strong enough to recover? I. The origins of Starbucks A. 1971 Beginnings B. Starbucks goes public in 1992 C. Rapid expansion from mid-1990s to mid-2000s II. Starbucks provides microeconomic principles A. Supply and
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Production–possibility frontier In economics‚ a production–possibility frontier (PPF)‚ sometimes called a production–possibility curve‚ production-possibility boundary or product transformation curve‚ is a graph that compares the production rates of two commodities that use the same fixed total of the factors of production. Graphically bounding the production set‚ the PPF curve shows the maximum specified production level of one commodity that results given the production level of the other. By
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Analyzing the Monopolistic Competition of the Retail Industry Understanding the Terms Symbol = a code comprised of letters used as a unique identification of the stock 52 week High = the highest price reached during the last 52 weeks 52 week Low = the lowest price reached during the last 52 weeks Dividend = taxable payment declared by a company’s board of directors & given to its shareholders out of the company’s current/retained earnings Dividend Yield = yield
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