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प्रश्न
Why does a firm under perfect competition earn only normal profits in the long run?
Show how a firm in a perfectly competitive market earns normal profit in the long run.
A perfectly competitive firm always enjoys normal profit in the long run, irrespective of the situation it faces in the short run. Discuss the statement in brief.
सविस्तर उत्तर
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उत्तर
A firm under perfect competition reaches long-run equilibrium when it earns only normal profit, i.e., when Total Revenue = Total Cost.
- Free Entry and Exit:
- The key feature of perfect competition in the long run is free entry and exit of firms.
- It ensures that firms cannot earn supernormal profits or incur losses permanently.
- Role of Short-Run Profits and Losses:
- Abnormal (supernormal) profits attract new firms into the industry.
- Losses force existing firms to exit the industry.
- Effect of Entry of New Firms (Abnormal Profits Case):
- New firms enter the market → Industry supply increases.
- The supply curve shifts right.
- Market price falls, reducing abnormal profits.
- Entry continues until only normal profits remain.
- Effect of Exit of Firms (Losses Case):
- Firms exit the industry; industry supply decreases.
- The supply curve shifts left.
- Market price rises, reducing losses.
- Exit continues until remaining firms earn normal profits.
- Long-Run Equilibrium Condition:
- In the long run:
Price (P) = Average Revenue (AR) = Marginal Revenue (MR) = Average Cost (AC) - Firms earn zero economic profit, i.e., normal profit.
- In the long run:
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Notes
Students should refer to the answer according to their question and preferred marks.
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