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Revision: Microeconomic Theory >> Determination of Equilibrium Price and Output Under Perfect Competition Economics ISC (Commerce) Class 12 CISCE

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Definitions [1]

Definitions: Perfect Competition
  • According to Mrs Joan Robinson, "Perfect competition prevails when the demand for the output of each producer is perfectly elastic."
  • "Perfect competition is characterised by the presence of many firms. All of them sell identical products. The seller is the price taker." – Bilas
  • "Perfect competition prevails when the demand for the output of each producer is perfectly elastic." – Mrs Joan Robinson
  • "Perfect competition describes a market in which there is a complete absence of direct competition among economic groups." – Ferguson

Key Points

Key Points: Perfect Competition
  • Perfect competition is an ideal market where many buyers and sellers trade identical products, and no one can control price.
  • Firms and buyers are price takers; the price is fixed by industry demand and supply.
  • Pure competition needs 3 conditions (large numbers, homogeneous product, free entry/exit).
  • Perfect competition needs 7 conditions (3 basic + perfect knowledge, factor mobility, no selling costs, no transport costs).
  • The model is used as a benchmark to judge how efficient other markets are.
Key Points: Price Determination Under Perfect Competition
  • Price under perfect competition is determined by the interaction of market demand and market supply.
  • Equilibrium price is the price at which quantity demanded equals quantity supplied; equilibrium quantity is the corresponding quantity.
  • At prices above equilibrium, there is excess supply and price tends to fall.
  • At prices below equilibrium, there is excess demand and the price tends to rise.
  • Marshall compared demand and supply to the two blades of a pair of scissors; both are essential for price determination.
  • In perfect competition, the industry determines the price, and each firm is a price taker and must accept that price.
Key Points: Changes in Equilibrium
  • Equilibrium price and quantity change whenever demand or supply curves shift.
  • rightward shift of demand or supply shows an increase; a leftward shift shows a decrease.
  • With supply fixed, demand and price move in the same direction (direct relation).
  • With demand fixed, supply and price move in the opposite direction (inverse relation).
  • Diagrams must show original curves (DD, SS), new curves (D₁D₁, D₂D₂, S₁S₁, S₂S₂), and old/new equilibrium points (E, E₁, E₂) with corresponding prices and quantities.​
Key Points: Effect of Simultaneous change in Demand and Supply on Equilibrium Price
  • Price effect depends on the size and direction of shifts in both demand and supply.
  • Quantity usually moves in the direction of both curves (↑ if both rise, ↓ if both fall).
  • Use diagrams to show shifts.
  • Always check which change (demand or supply) is bigger to predict the final outcome.
Key Points: Time Element in the Theory of Price Determination
  • The time element is important because it controls how much supply can adjust to demand, and therefore how price is determined.
  • In the market period, supply is fixed; demand alone determines price.
  • In the short period, supply adjusts partially; both demand and supply influence price.
  • In the long period, all factors are variable; cost of production and supply play the main role, giving the normal or natural price.
  • In the secular period, very long-term forces change basic conditions, so no simple price rule applies.
Key Points: Determination of Equilibrium Prices
  • Time element (market, short, long period) is essential to explain how quickly supply can respond to demand and how price is determined.​
  • In the market period, supply is almost fixed; demand mainly decides price, especially for perishable goods.​
  • For durable goods in the market period, sellers can hold stock and use a reserve price, influenced by future expectations and storage costs.​
  • In the short period, firms adjust output using existing capacity; demand shifts cause changes in price, output, and short‑run profits or losses.​
  • In the long period, firms can change scale and enter/exit; the normal price is the long‑run equilibrium price where firms earn only normal profit and P = MC = minimum LAC.
Key Points: Normal Price and Law of Returns
  • The normal price in the long run is determined where price = AC = MC and firms earn normal profits.
  • The effect of a change in demand on long-run normal price depends on the cost condition of the industry.
  • Increasing returns (decreasing cost):
    The long-run supply curve slopes downward.
    When demand increases, normal price falls, quantity increases.
  • Diminishing returns (increasing cost):
    The long-run supply curve slopes upward.
    When demand increases, normal price rises, and the quantity increases.
  • Constant returns (constant cost):
    The long-run supply curve is horizontal.
    When demand increases, normal price remains unchanged; only the quantity increases.
  • Thus, with an increase in demand, the long-run normal price may rise, fall, or remain constant, depending on whether the industry is increasing cost, constant cost, or decreasing cost.
Key Points: Comparison between Market Price and Normal Price
  • Market price is a short‑run, actual price driven mainly by current demand when supply is fixed.​
  • Normal price is a long‑run equilibrium price determined by cost and full adjustment of demand and supply.​
  • Market price oscillates around normal price; in the long run, firms earn only normal profit where Price = minimum LAC.
Key Points: Practical Applications of Tools of Demand and Supply Analysis
  • Demand–supply tools help analyse government policies like price control, price support and minimum wage laws.
  • Price control (price ceiling) below equilibrium creates excess demand and shortage; if above equilibrium, it has no effect.
  • Shortage under price control can cause a black market or require rationing to distribute limited supply.
  • For agriculture, a price support system using MSP acts as a price floor and protects farmers from very low prices during harvest.
  • Government buying surplus at MSP stabilises farmers’ income and supports future production.
  • In labour markets, minimum wage laws protect workers from extremely low wages but may create some unemployment if set above equilibrium.
  • To reduce unemployment created by high minimum wages, the government must encourage activities that increase demand for labour.​
Key Points: Determination of Short Run Equilibrium of a Firm
  • Industry determines market price via the intersection of DD and SS.
  • An individual firm under perfect competition is a price-taker and faces a P = AR = MR horizontal demand curve.
  • Short-run equilibrium of a firm: SMC = MR, and SMC cuts MR from below.
  • The short-run supply curve of the firm is the rising part of SMC above minimum AVC.
Key Points: Determination of Long Run Equilibrium of a Firm
  • Long run: all factors variable; firms can freely enter or exit the industry.
  • In long-run equilibrium under perfect competition:
    Each firm earns only normal profit.
    Each firm produces at the minimum point of LAC.
    .
  • Industry is in long-run equilibrium when market demand = market supply and there is no tendency for entry or exit.
  • Supernormal profits cause entry and lower prices; losses cause exit and higher prices; both processes move the industry to normal profit in the long run.
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