हिंदी

Comparison between different forms of market

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Topics

  • Comparison Table
  • Real-Life Application
CISCE: Class 12

Comparison Table

Basis of comparison Perfect Competition Monopoly Monopolistic Competition Oligopoly Monopsony
Number of sellers Very large number of small sellers One seller only Fairly large number of sellers Few big sellers Many sellers
Number of buyers Large number of buyers Large number of buyers Large number of buyers Large number of buyers One big buyer
Nature of product Homogeneous (identical) product Homogeneous product with no close substitute Differentiated product (similar but not same) Homogeneous or differentiated product Homogeneous product
Knowledge of market Perfect knowledge for buyers and sellers Some / imperfect knowledge Some / imperfect knowledge Some / imperfect knowledge Some / imperfect knowledge
Entry and exit of firms Free entry and free exit Entry is blocked Free entry and exit Entry is restricted or difficult Entry is restricted or difficult
Market power (control over price) No market power (price-taker) Very high power Limited power Significant power Very high power
Price influence Firms are price-takers (accept market price) Firm is price-maker Firm is price-maker to some extent Firms are price-makers Buyer is price-maker
Selling cost (advertising etc.) Normally absent Usually absent or very low Present and important Present and often heavy Usually absent
Slope of demand curve Perfectly elastic demand curve (horizontal) Downward sloping, less elastic Downward sloping, more elastic Kinked demand curve (special shape) Downward sloping
AR–MR relationship (long run) AR = MR AR > MR AR > MR AR > MR AR > MR
Profit in long run Only normal profit Can earn abnormal (super-normal) profit Mostly normal profit in long run Can earn abnormal profit Can earn abnormal profit
CISCE: Class 12

Real-Life Application

  • Perfect competition: grain or vegetable markets where many farmers sell the same product and no one can fix the price alone.​
  • Monopoly: Indian Railways or local water supply – one main seller, no close substitute.​
  • Monopolistic competition: brands of soap, shampoo, and toothpaste – many sellers, similar but differentiated products.​
  • Oligopoly: car industry, airlines, telecom – few big firms dominate the market.​
  • Monopsony: a single large factory or government being the main buyer of labour/services in an area.​

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