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Relationship between Total, Average and Marginal Revenues under Perfect Competition

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Topics

  • Introduction
  • Example Table
  • Behaviour and Relationships
  • Real-Life Application
  • Key Points: Relationship between Total, Average and Marginal Revenues under Perfect Competition
CISCE: Class 12

Introduction

In perfect competition, a firm can sell any amount at the market price. The price remains constant no matter how much output is sold.

CISCE: Class 12

Example Table

Price (₹) Output (Q) Total Revenue (TR) Average Revenue (AR) Marginal Revenue (MR)
15 1 15 15 15
15 2 30 15 15
15 3 45 15 15
15 4 60 15 15
15 5 75 15 15
CISCE: Class 12

Behaviour and Relationships

  • AR stays the same as price, because the market price does not change when a firm sells more units.
  • MR is also the same as price, since every extra unit sold adds exactly the market price to TR.
  • Graph: Both AR and MR curves are horizontal lines at the level of market price.
  • TR increases steadily as output increases. The TR curve is a straight line that starts at zero and rises with each unit—its slope matches the price.
CISCE: Class 12

Real-Life Application

Imagine selling bottles of juice at a school fair—everyone charges ₹15, and you can sell as many as you want at ₹15 each. No need to drop your price to sell more!

CISCE: Class 12

Key Points: Relationship Between Total, Average and Marginal Revenues under Perfect Competition

  • AR and MR stay constant at the level of market price for every output.
  • TR increases in direct proportion to output (straight line upward).
  • In perfect competition, firms are price takers, not price makers.
  • Both curves (AR and MR) are flat and coincide.
  • At zero output, TR is zero.

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