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Is it enough to say that profit is maximised when MC = MR? - Economics

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Question

Is it enough to say that profit is maximised when MC = MR?

Very Long Answer
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Solution

  1. First Condition (Necessary): MC = MR This is the basic rule of profit maximisation:
    • If MR > MC, producing more adds to profit.
    • If MC > MR, producing less saves costs and increases profit.
    • Hence, MC = MR indicates no incentive to produce more or less, i.e., profit is at a maximum or minimum.
    • Point R: Firm just covers costs (break-even), not profit-maximising.
    • Point K: True profit-maximising output.
  1. Second Condition (Sufficient):
    1. The MC curve is rising (i.e., has a positive slope) when it intersects the MR curve.
    2. At this point, increasing output further would increase MC more than MR, hence reducing profits, confirming it's a maximum.
    3. If MC cuts MR from above, like at point R, its a minimum or break-even, not a profit maximum.
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Chapter 10: Producer's Equilibrium - TEST YOURSELF QUESTIONS [Page 192]

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Frank Economics [English] Class 12 ISC
Chapter 10 Producer's Equilibrium
TEST YOURSELF QUESTIONS | Q 11. | Page 192
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