--%>

Enter an industry by barriers to entry

Barriers to entry: (w) make this complicated or impossible for new firms to profitably enter an industry. (x) uniformly violate U.S. antitrust statutes. (y) are fundamentally technological instead of economic. (z) stimulate aggressive competition.

Can someone explain/help me with best solution about problem of Economics...

   Related Questions in Microeconomics

  • Q : Pretax -posttax and transfer

    Refer to the following diagram. If line b represents the pretax and transfer distribution of income in the United States, we would expect the post-tax and transfer distribution to be: A) line a. B) line b, because taxes and transfers have no effect on income distribut

  • Q : Make economic profits by

    A profit-maximizing monopolist will certainly be capable to generate economic profits when, at certain level of output: (w) average fixed costs [AFC] are very high. (x) average total costs [ATC] lies above the demand curve. (y) averag

  • Q : Problem on Determinants of Demand I

    I have a problem in economics on Determinants of Demand. Please help me in the following question. Income and tastes most directly influence the: (i) Demand. (ii) Market equilibrium (iii) Prices. (iii) Quantities. (iv) Supply.

    Q : Labor union monopoly I have a problem

    I have a problem in economics on Labor union monopoly. Please help me in the following question. As compared to pure competition, beneath a pure labor union monopoly, the wage will tend to: (1) Higher and employment will also be higher. (2) Lower and

  • Q : Problem relating to Taxes and Subsidies

    I have a problem in economics on Problem relating to Taxes and Subsidies. Please help me in the following question. The sales taxes and government subsidies: (1) Influence only demand. (2) Do not influence the supply curve. (3) Affect the supply curve

  • Q : Marginal Utilities and Demand Prices

    Can someone help me in finding out the right answer from the given options. Rational individual consumers tend to purchase goods until the relative market prices for each and every goods purchased are proportional to all individuals: (i) Cost or benefit ratio. (ii) Op

  • Q : Marginal revenue in kinked-demand model

    Into this "kinked-demand" model, such firm views the marginal revenue curve this faces as the: (1) linear curve acD2 for all prices. (2) linear curve deMR1 for all prices. (3) nonlinear curve adeMR1. (

  • Q : Price and quantity supply The

    The positively sloped supply curves exhibit relationships which: (1) Follow from law of demand. (2) Are positive between quantity supplied and price. (3) Are negative between price and the quantity sold. (4) Exist for services however not goods.

  • Q : Cut price and earn negative profit A

    A huge firm may cut price and earn negative profit when a new firm enters the market so as to: (w) induce the new firm to exit. (x) build a reputation for cutting price so as to deter future entry. (y) gain market control. (z) All of the above. <

  • Q : Maximization of the Goals of Firm I

    I have a problem in economics on Maximization of the Goals of Firm. Please help me in the following question. The firm’s goal of profit maximization is most distantly analogous to: (i) Revenue maximization by the Internal Revenue Agents. (ii) Ma