--%>

Competition in the long run

Economic profits produce competitive pressures which raise the industries: (w) price for output. (x) output and number of firms. (y) exit rate for established firms. (z) monopoly power in its largest firms.

Hey friends please give your opinion for the problem of Economics that is given above.

   Related Questions in Microeconomics

  • Q : Firm under monopoly A firm under

    A firm under monopoly a price maker by the reasons shown below:A) The monopolist is a single seller of the product in market. Therefore it has full control over supply.B) There are no close replacements of the monopoly product,

  • Q : Occurrence of the price discrimination

    Price discrimination occurs when a good is: (1) priced by a formula yielding monopoly profit. (2) denied to customers who refuse to pay the going price. (3) sold at different prices not reflecting differences in costs. (4) subject to government price

  • Q : Area below supply curve of resource The

    The area below a resource’s price line although above its supply curve is: (w) consumer surplus. (x) monopoly profit. (y) excess value. (z) economic rent. Can anybody suggest me the proper explanation for giv

  • Q : Kinked demand curves and sticky prices

    Sticky prices within oligopoly markets are: (w) predicted by the kinked demand curve model. (x) substantiated by many statistical studies. (y) most common for highly differentiated products. (z) a result of price discrimination.

    Q : Marginal resource cost of labor For a

    For a gain maximizing competitive firm operating in the competitive labor market, the: (1) Marginal resource cost of the labor is similar to the wage rate. (2) Supply of the labor is perfectly inelastic. (3) Production quota is precisely proportional to the labor hire

  • Q : Average cost per unit of production

    When Prohibition Corporation maximizes profit within its production of St. Valentine’s Day software, there average cost per unit of it produced will be roughly: (i) $4 per copy. (ii) $10 per copy. (iii) $18 per copy. (iv) $24 per copy. (v) $32 per copy.

  • Q : Demand and elasticity (a) Suppose the

    (a) Suppose the income elasticity of demand for pre-recorded music compact disks is +4 and the income elasticity of demand for a cabinet maker’s work is +0.4. Compare the impact on pre-recorded music compact disks and the cabinet maker’s work of a recession that reduces consumer incomes by 10 per c

  • Q : Why production possibility curve is

    Why production possibility curve is concave? Answer: This is due to increasing the marginal opportunity cost.

  • Q : Personal distribution of income Select

    Select the right ans wer of the question. The personal distribution of income refers to the: A) division of income between personal taxes, consumption expenditures, and saving. B) division of income on the basis of industry sources, for example, agriculture, transport

  • Q : Transfers to the poor in-kind Transfers

    Transfers to the poor “in-kind” are probably to be favored over cash transfer payments through: (a) people who are skeptical that the poor can manage their income competently. (b) economists concerned with improving effici