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MBA201a: Entry, Exit & Equilibrium

This text explores the basic definitions and principles of entry, exit, and equilibrium in the context of MBA201a. It discusses the short run and long run, profit maximization, cost curves, pricing, market pressures, industry supply curve, and long run competitive equilibrium.

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MBA201a: Entry, Exit & Equilibrium

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  1. MBA201a: Entry, Exit & Equilibrium

  2. Basic definitions & principles (I) • In the short run (SR), • for an individual firm, many costs are sunk, and • for an entire industry, the number of firms is fixed. • In the long run (LR), • everything is variable: production process within a firm and the number of firms. MBA201a - Fall 2009

  3. Basic definitions & principles (II) • Profit maximization implies the following decision rules: • In the short run: • Produce at the quantity level where MR=MC*, so long as your revenues cover your variable costs. • Otherwise, exit. • In the long run: • Enter markets or expand capacity as long as your incremental revenues will cover your incremental total costs. • Stay in the market as long as you continue to cover your total costs. • Exit if you can no longer cover your total costs. * Remember that MR=P for a price-taking firm (aka a firm in a perfectly competitive industry). MBA201a - Fall 2009

  4. LR vs. SR example: Recall the t-shirt factory • To produce T-shirts: • Lease one machine at $20 / week. • Machine requires one worker. • The machine, operated by the worker, produces one T-shirt per hour. • Worker is paid $1/hour on weekdays (up to 40 hours), $2/hour on Saturdays (up to 8 hours), $3 on Sundays (up to 8 hours). MBA201a - Fall 2009

  5. T-shirt factory cost curves Cost ($) MC 3 2 ATC 1.5 1 48 T-shirts 10 20 30 40 50 MBA201a - Fall 2009

  6. T-shirt factory cost curves Cost ($) MC 3 2 ATC 1.5 AVC 1 48 T-shirts 10 20 30 40 50 MBA201a - Fall 2009

  7. Short versus long run • It’s Monday morning. The weekly machine lease has been paid. p=$1.3. Should the factory shut down? • It’s Friday afternoon. Should it pay for next week’s lease? MBA201a - Fall 2009

  8. SR pricing & LR profitability Cost AC p2 MC/AVC p1 D1 qcap MBA201a - Fall 2009

  9. SR pricing & LR profitability Cost AC p2 MC/AVC p1 qcap In industries with low MC/high fixed costs, market pressures may produce prices that are highly volatile. MBA201a - Fall 2009

  10. Cost MC market price Entry/expansion & exit • Say you: • observe the market price, • know your costs would look something like the curves on the graph. • Would you want to get into this industry? ATC Q MBA201a - Fall 2009

  11. Entry/expansion & exit Cost • Say you: • observe the market price, • know your costs would look something like the curves on the graph. • Would you want to get into this industry? MC ATC market price Q MBA201a - Fall 2009

  12. market price Entry/expansion & exit Cost ($) • Say you: • observe the market price, • know your costs would look something like the curves on the graph. • Would you want to get into this industry? • Would you want to stay in the industry if you were already in it? MC ATC Q MBA201a - Fall 2009

  13. Constructing the industry supply curve Recall that the industry supply curve is the sum of individual firm’s supply curves: Firm A Firm B Industry P P P 180 100 Q Q Q 10 100 30 10 100 130 MBA201a - Fall 2009

  14. Entry and the industry supply curve Imagine that a firm identical to Firm A enters the industry. 2xFirm A Firm B Industry P P P Supply Curve with Firm A & Firm B 180 100 Supply Curve with 2 Firm A’s & Firm B Q Q Q 10 100 30 10 20 100 130 200 MBA201a - Fall 2009

  15. Entry and the market equilibrium price P Entry shifts the supply curve to the right. As a result, the market equilibrium price goes down. Pbeforeentry Pafterentry Q MBA201a - Fall 2009

  16. When does entry stop? P Cost MC P1 P2 ATC Q Q MBA201a - Fall 2009

  17. Which firms stay and which firms exit? If several firms have access to the same technology as Firm A, what will happen to Firm B? 2xFirm A Firm B Industry P P P 180 100 D Q Q Q 10 100 30 10 20 100 130 200 MBA201a - Fall 2009

  18. How much do the remaining firms produce? 2xFirm A 3rd Firm A Industry P P P Supply Curve with 2 Firm A’s 140 100 D Supply Curve with 3 Firm A’s Q Q Q 10 80 10 10 160 MBA201a - Fall 2009

  19. The third firm A’s entry decision P Profits at P = 140 140 100 Q 10 80 MBA201a - Fall 2009

  20. The third firm A’s entry decision P Profits at P = 120 120 100 Q 10 55 MBA201a - Fall 2009

  21. Long run competitive equilibrium Industry P Supply Curve with 3 Firm A’s 100 D Q 10 160 170 = Long run competitive equilibrium supply curve; 17 firms, each producing 10 units each at price = 100. MBA201a - Fall 2009

  22. Long run competitive equilibrium • In a long-run competitive equilibrium: • All of the existing firms are maximizing their short-run profits. • None of the existing firms want to either exit or expand output. • No new firms want to enter. • All existing firms earn zero economic profits. • The market price equals the minimum of the long-run average cost curve (P=min(LRAC)). • All consumers who want to buy the product at this price are able to. MBA201a - Fall 2009

  23. Can an industry with a monopoly be in a LR equilibrium? Cost MC ATC D MBA201a - Fall 2009

  24. Takeaways • Firms have more control over their costs in the long run. • A firm should stay in business in the short run as long as it is making some contribution towards its fixed costs (i.e. P>AVC). • The following dynamics contribute to the long-run competitive equilibrium: • Firms entering markets where there are opportunities to make profits. • Firms exiting markets where they can no longer cover their total costs, even if they’re making profit maximizing price/output decisions. • In a long-run competitive equilibrium: p=min(LRAC), all firms earn zero economic profits. MBA201a - Fall 2009

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