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Question
What are the conditions of long-run equilibrium of a firm under perfect competition?
Very Long Answer
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Solution
For a firm to be in long-run equilibrium under perfect competition, two essential conditions must be satisfied:
- LMC = MR = AR = LAC
- LMC (Long-run Marginal Cost) = MR (Marginal Revenue): This is the profit maximization condition. The firm maximizes profit (or minimizes loss) when marginal cost equals marginal revenue.
- LMC must cut MR from below to ensure equilibrium is stable.
- AR (Average Revenue) = LAC (Long-run Average Cost): This means the firm is making normal profit, i.e., just covering its costs (including opportunity costs), with no abnormal/supernormal profit or loss.
- Tangency at Minimum Point of LAC
- The point of equilibrium occurs where the firm’s LAC curve is tangent to the price line (AR) at its minimum point.
- This also implies productive efficiency: the firm produces at the optimum scale of output (lowest cost per unit).

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