![]() To average total cost, so you have zero economic profit, zero economic profit. Revenue curve intersects with our marginal cost curve, which for any of these situations, is the rational amount to produce, the rational quantity to produce for a profit-maximizing firm, that's going to be exactly at a level where the price is equal And so, another way to think about it, where our marginal ![]() And so, it's going to, in the long run, be at a point where none of the firms are making economic profit. People who are going to exit, which is going to push line up. Negative economic profit, then you're going to have Going to have more entrants, which is going to push this price down. Make an economic profit that, if they are, they're None of these firms are going to be able to That, in the long run, under perfect competition, To be their demand curve and their marginal revenue curve. Whatever the price is in the market, each of those firms just It is one of many firms with an undifferentiated productĪnd no barriers to entry. Whether we're talking about a monopoly or perfect competition when it comes to the demand curve. We have our marginal cost curve and our average total cost curve that's at a minimum point right where it intersects So, as you can see in all three scenarios, we have a similar cost structure. Going to focus on something in between, which we've talkedĪbout in previous videos, which is monopolistic competition. ![]() Already thought about the demand curves for perfectĬompetition and monopolies and the types of economic
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