Assignment 3
Due date: Dec 23
Name:
Student ID:
Problem 1: True or False. Please explain why. (15 points)
1. Long-run average costs can’t be higher than the short-run
average cost. (5 points)
Solution: True.
The long-run average costs can’t be higher than the short-run
average costs because in the long-run all costs are variable while
in the short-run only some costs are variable.
2. In a perfectly competitive market with identical firms, a
permanent positive demand shock leads to a permanent increase
in the price in the long run. (5 points)
Solution: False.
In a perfectly competitive market with identical firms, the long-run
equilibrium price is equal to the minimum ATC. Even through
there is a permanent positive demand shock, firm entry will bring
the price back to the same level as in the initial state, where P=
min ATC.
3. Adding up the individual supply curves P = 5 + Q1 and P = 3 +
Q2 will lead to the market supply curve P = 8 + 2Q. (5 points)
Solution: False.
We have to add the curves horizontally, not vertically, it doesn’t
make sense to add prices. The market supply curve would be
Problem 2: Production cost. (15 points)
You obtained the following short-run cost information of a firm.
When the firm produces 2 units of output, its total cost is
$500,040. When the firm produces 10 units of output, its average
fixed cost is $50,000.
(a) What is the average variable cost when the firm produces 2
units of output? (10 points)
When Q=2, TC(2)=500,040=FC+VC(2).
When Q=10, AFC(10)=50,000, which implies that FC = 50,000 ×
10 = 500,000.
Thus, we have VC(2)=40, which implies that AVC(2)=40/2=20.
(b) What is the average fixed cost when the firm produces 5 units
of output? (5 points)
Since FC=50,000, the average fixed cost when Q=5 is
AVC(5)=500,000/5=100,000
Problem 3: Perfect competition. (20 points)
Consider a perfectly competitive market for skateboards that is in
a long-run equilibrium. Each firm’s short-run cost is
SRTC(q) = q3 − 3q2 + 3q + 4.
Each firm’s long-run total cost is
LRTC(q) = 3q.
The market demand for skateboards is QD (P) = 27 − P.
(a) What’s the equilibrium price in the long-run equilibrium?(5
points)
Since the market is competitive, the long-run equilibrium price
P∗ = min LRATC = 3.
(b) What’s the number of skateboards each firm produces in the
long-run equilibrium.(5 points) [Hint: If the market is in a long-run
equilibrium, it is also in a short-run equilibrium.]
In the short-run equilibrium, market price P∗ =MC(q∗ ), in which q∗ is
the quantity a firm produces.
Since
SRMC(q∗ ) = 3q∗ 2 - 6q∗ +3,
by P∗ =MC(q∗ ), we would have 3=3q∗ 2 - 6q∗ +3. So q∗ =2.
(c) What is the equilibrium market quantity in the initial long-run
equilibrium? How many firms are in the market? (10 points)
At price P∗ =3, by the market demand function we have equilibrium
market quantity is Q∗ = 24.
Since every firm produces 2 units, there have to be 24/2=12 firms.
Problem 4: Monopoly. (50 points)
A monopoly faces market demand Q = 30 − P and has a cost
1
function C(Q) = 2 Q2 .
(a) Find the profit maximizing price and quantity and the resulting
profit to the monopoly. (15 points)
The monopoly produces at the point where MR = MC. In this
question MR = 30−2Q and MC=Q. Equating MR and MC gives us
Q = 10, which is the profit-maximizing quantity.
From demand function, we can find the profit-maximizing price
P=30-10=20.
The resulting profit is 10×20- C(10) =150.
(b) What is the socially optimal price? Calculate the deadweight
loss (DWL) due to the monopolist behavior of this firm. Calculate
consumer surplus (CS) and producer surplus (PS). (15 points)
At the socially optimal price,
D(Q)=MC(Q).
That is, 30−Q = Q, which implies socially optimal quantity is Q =
15 and social optimal price is P = 30−Q = 15.
Instead, monopoly sells Q = 10 at P = 20, which generates DWL =
(20−10)(15−10)/2 = 25.
CS = (30−20)·10/2 = 50 and PS = 150.
(Note that the producer surplus is equal to the profit, in the
absence of the fixed cost. )
(c) Assume that the government puts a price ceiling on the
monopolist at P = 18. How much output will the monopolist
produce? What will be the profit of the monopolist? Calculate CS,
PS, and DWL. Is the deadweight loss higher than that in part (b)?
(20 points)
Now monopoly can’t charge its optimal price of $20. Instead, it
chooses the maximum price it is allowed to charge: P = 18.
Monopoly sells Q = 30 − 18 = 12 at this price. The resulting profit
is 18·12−12·12/2 = 144. CS = 12·12/2 = 72, PS = profit =
(18+6)·12/2 = 144, and DW L = 6 · 3/2 = 9. The DWL is smaller
now because price is lower than under monopoly and output is
higher.