Business Economics Chapter 4 Notes
Business Economics Chapter 4 Notes
Business Economics Chapter 4 Notes
Some goods which are free or having zero prices i.e. we need not make any payment for them. Example: air,
sunlight etc. These are free goods.
Economic goods are scarce in relation to their demand and have an opportunity cost.
Value in use refers to usefulness or utility i.e. the attribute which a thing may have to satisfy human needs.
Value in exchange or economic value is measured by the most someone is willing to give up in other goods and
services in order to obtain a good or service.
Market: Place where buyers and seller meet and influence price. The elements of Market are:
Classification of Market:
Local Markets: When buyers and sellers are limited to a local area or region, the market is called a local
market. E.g. Hair dressers
Regional Markets: Cover a wider area such as a few adjacent cities, parts of states, or cluster of states.
National Markets: When the demand for a commodity or service is limited to the national boundaries of a
country, we say that the product has a national market.
Based on Time:
Very short period market: Market period or very short period refers to a period of time in which supply is fixed
and cannot be increased or decreased. E.g. Flowers
Short-period Market: Short period is a period which is slightly longer than the very short period. In this
period, the supply of output may be increased by increasing the employment of variable factors with the given
fixed factors and state of technology.
Long-period Market: In the long period, all factors become variable and the supply of commodities may be
changed by altering the scale of production.
Very long-period or secular period is one when secular movements are recorded in certain factors over a period.
The factors include the size of the population, capital and raw materials supply etc.
Spot or cash Market: Refer to those markets where goods are exchanged for money payable either immediately
or within a short span of time.
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Forward or Future Market: In this market, transactions involve contracts with a promise to pay and deliver
goods at some future date.
Based on Regulation:
Regulated Market: In this market, transactions are statutorily regulated so as to put an end to unfair practices.
Such markets may be established for specific products or for a group of products. E.g. Stock exchange.
Unregulated Market: It is also called a free market as there are no stipulations on the transactions.
Wholesale Market: Market where the commodities are bought and sold in bulk or large quantities. Transactions
generally take place between traders.
Retail Market: When the commodities are sold in small quantities, it is called retail market. This is the market for
ultimate consumers
Perfect Competition is characterised by many sellers selling identical products to many buyers.
Monopolistic Competition differs in only one respect, namely, there are many sellers offering
differentiated products to many buyers. E.g. Restaurant
Monopoly is a situation where there is a single seller producing for many buyers. Its product is necessarily
extremely differentiated since there are no competing sellers producing products which are close substitutes.
Oligopoly: There are a few sellers selling competing products to many buyers.
Marginal Revenue:
In imperfect competition, the average revenue curve of an individual firm slopes downwards as in these market
forms, when a firm increases the price of its product, its quantity demanded decreases and vice versa.
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PR Academy
Under perfect competition, since the firms are price takers, the average revenue (or price) curve or demand curve
is perfectly elastic, which means that an individual firm has constant average revenue (or price).
When price remains constant, marginal revenue will be equal to average revenue and thus AR curve and MR
curve will coincide and will be horizontal curves. See below figure.
Behavioural Principles:
Principle 1 - A firm should not produce at all if its total variable costs are not met.
Principle 2 - The firm will be making maximum profits by expanding output to the level where marginal revenue
is equal to marginal cost.
Introduction:
Price goods express their exchange values. Prices are also used for expressing the value of various services
rendered by different factors of production such as land, labour, capital and organization in the form of rent,
wages, interest and product.
A free market is one in which the forces of demand and supply are free to take their own course and there is
no intervention from outside by government or any other entity.
Determination of Prices: In a competitive market, price is determined by interaction between demand and
supply of goods.
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Equilibrium price is the price at which the quantity demanded equals supplies in a market.
Equilibrium is said to be stable if any disturbance to it is self-adjusting so that the original equilibrium is
restored.
Changes in demand and supply: Four types of changes in demand curve. They are:
Graph (a) shows that increase in demand is equal to increase in supply. The new demand curve D1D1 and S1S1
meet at E1. The new equilibrium price is equal to the old equilibrium price (OP). However, equilibrium quantity is
more.
Graph (b) shows that increase in demand is more than increase in supply. Hence, the new equilibrium price OP1
is higher than the old equilibrium price OP. The opposite will happen i.e. the equilibrium price will go down if
there is a simultaneous fall in demand and supply and the fall in demand is more than the fall in supply.
Graph (c) shows that supply increases in a greater proportion than demand. The new equilibrium price will be less
than the original equilibrium price. Conversely, if the fall in the supply is more than proportionate to the fall in the
demand, the equilibrium price will go up.
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When demand increases and supply decreases, as in Graph (a), the equilibrium price rises but nothing certain
can be said about the change in equilibrium quantity.
When demand decreases and supply increases, as in Graph (b), the equilibrium price falls but nothing certain
can be said about the change in equilibrium quantity.
The market structure characterises the way the sellers and buyers interact to determine equilibrium
price and quantity.
Perfect Competition: Large number of buyers and seller, for a product at same price.
Characteristics:
1. Large number of buyer and seller, with no one able to influence the price, demand or supply.
2. The products are homogeneous
3. Every firm is free to enter market and go out
The above three characteristics are fulfilled it is called as Pure Competition
4. Perfect knowledge about market conditions by both buyers and sellers
5. Has low transaction Cost
6. All the firms are price taker
Equilibrium of the industry: When the total output of the industry is equal to the total demand, we say that the
industry is in equilibrium; the price then prevailing is equilibrium price.
Equilibrium of the Firm: The firm is said to be in equilibrium when it maximizes its profit. The output which
gives maximum profit to the firm is called equilibrium output. In the equilibrium state, the firm has no
incentive either to increase or decrease its output. In a competitive market AR = MR = Price.
1. MR = MC
2. MC should have positive slope
Short Run Profit maximisation by a Competitive firm is achieved when MC curve cuts MR curve from below.
Short run supply curve of the firm in a competitive market is identical to MC curve.
Normal Profits: When the average revenue of a firm is just equal to its average total cost, a firm earns normal
profits or zero economic profits.
Supernormal Profits: When a firm earns supernormal profits, its average revenues are more than its
average total cost.
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Losses: This is the situation when the firm is minimising losses.
The condition for the long run equilibrium of the -rm is that the marginal cost should be equal to the price and
the long run average cost i.e. LMC = LAC = P.
The fi-rm adjusts its plant size so as to produce that level of output at which the LAC is the minimum possible.
At equilibrium, the short run marginal cost is equal to the long run marginal cost and the short run average cost
is equal to the long run average cost.
Thus, in the long run we have, SMC = LMC = SAC = LAC = P = MR.
This implies that at the minimum point of the LAC, the corresponding (short run) plant is worked at its
optimal capacity, so that the minima of the LAC and SAC coincide. On the other hand, the LMC cuts the LAC at
its minimum point and the SMC cuts the SAC at its minimum point. Thus, at the minimum point of the LAC the
above equality is achieved.
In the long run, in a perfect competition industry, the market mechanism leads to optimum allocation of
resources. They are:
Monopoly
Features:
The curve will downward sloping, as the firm must reduce price in order to sell extra quantities.
Types of Monopolies:
Simple monopoly where the monopolist charges uniform price from all buyers. Discriminating monopoly where
the monopolist charges different prices from different buyers of the same good or service.
Can a monopolist incur losses? Demand and cost conditions determines the profit of the monopolist. If ATC>AR,
the monopolist will incur losses.
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Long run equilibrium: In the absence of competition, the monopolist need not produce at the optimal level.
The firm can produce at a sub-optimal scale also. The monopolist will not continue if the firm makes losses in
the long run.
Price Discrimination:
Price discrimination is a method of pricing adopted by a monopolist in order to earn abnormal profits.
It refers to the practices of charging different prices for different units of the same commodity. E.g. A lower
subscription is charged from student readers in case of certain journals.
1. Seller should have some control over the supply of his product.
2. The seller should be able to divide his market into two or more sub-markets
3. The price-elasticity of the product should be different in different sub-markets.
4. It should not be possible for the buyers of low-priced market to resell the product to the buyers of high-
priced market.
First degree price discrimination, the monopolist separates the market into each individual consumer and
charges them the price they are willing and able to pay and thereby extract the entire consumer surplus.
E.g. Doctors and Lawyers.
The second degree price discrimination, different prices are charged for different quantities of sold. E.g. Bigger
pack of Rice costs less.
The third degree price discrimination, price varies by attributes such as location or by customer
segment. E.g. Low fare for Senior Citizens in railways.
In order to reach the equilibrium position, the discriminating monopolist has to make three decisions:
2) How the total output should be distributed between the two sub-markets? and
The discriminating monopolist will maximize his profits by producing the level of output at which marginal cost
curve (MC) intersects the aggregate marginal revenue curve (AMR).
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PR Academy
Many essential services (e.g. railways) cannot be profitably run unless price discrimination is followed.
Some consumers, especially, poor consumers, will bene-t from lower prices as they would not have been
able to purchase the good or service if uniform high prices are charged for all consumers.
The practice of product and service differentiation gives each seller a chance to attract business to himself on
some basis other than price. This is the monopolistic part of the market situation. Thus, this market
contains features of both the markets discussed earlier – monopoly and perfect competition. E.g. Different
varieties of Mobile phones.
Features:
Each firm is a price maker and is in a position to determine the price of its own product. As such, the firm is
faced with a downward sloping demand curve for its product. Less-differentiated more elastic the demand
curve.
1. MC = MR
2. MC Curve should cut MR curve from below
When the unit cost is more than the price, firms in monopolistic competition will incur losses.
In the long run, super normal profits earned by the individual firms will wiped by the new entrants into the
industry, thus profits will become normal in the long run in a monopolistic industry.
In case of persisting losses, in the long run, the loss-making firms will exit from the market and this will go on till
the remaining -rms make normal profits only.
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PR Academy
In case firm wants to make the production at least cost, it has to reduce the price to sell the extra quantities,
this in turn will lead to losses to firm, therefore, it will be irrational to use full capacity.
Oligopoly: It is competition among the few. E.g. Airtel, BSNL, Vodafone. When there are few (two to ten) sellers
in a market selling homogeneous or differentiated products, oligopoly is said to exist.
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PR Academy
Types of Oligopoly:
Importance of Advertising and Selling Cost: In order to be competitive firms shall spend considerable amounts
on Advertising and Selling. They cannot resort to price-war to be profitable.
Group Behaviour: Firms may agree to work together E.g. Star alliance
Price Leadership:
Cartels: group of firms that explicitly agree (collude) to coordinate their activities.
Price leadership by dominant firms, the large firm sets its price to maximise its profits.
Barometric price leadership: Old, respected, experienced firms sets the price, every firms follows the price
The demand curve facing an oligopolist, according to the kinked demand curve hypothesis, has a ‘kink’ at the
level of the prevailing price. It is because the segment of the demand curve above the prevailing price level is
highly elastic and the segment of the demand curve below the prevailing price level is inelastic.
Each oligopolist believes that if it lowers the price below the prevailing level its competitors will follow him and
will accordingly lower prices, whereas if it raises the price above the prevailing level, its competitors will not
follow its increase in price.
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