--%>

Entry and exit of purely competitive firm

Pure competition is described by freedom of entry and exit by firms which are: (i) price discriminators and quality adjusters. (ii) price takers and quantity adjusters. (iii) owned and operated by entrepreneurs. (iv) arbitrators and price makers.  (v) price makers and quality adapters.

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

   Related Questions in Microeconomics

  • Q : Competitive Markets and Labor unions I

    I have a problem in economics on Competitive Markets-Labor unions. Please help me in the following question. The purely competitive labor markets are not characterized through: (1) Most of the individual buyers and sellers of the labor services. (2) S

  • Q : Positively sloped demand curve of

    When your income is positively and closely tied to the price of a specific product, a raise in its price might cause: (1) The income effect which, in severe conditions, yields a positively sloped demand curve. (2) You to go bankrupt. (3) The powerful positive substitu

  • Q : Characteristic firms of purely

    At market price P0, this purely competitive industry’s characteristic firms will earn: (i) positive economic profit. (ii) negative economic profit. (iii) zero economic profit. (iv) negative accounting profit. (v) important dividends f

  • Q : Price of Substitute goods What occurs

    What occurs to the demand for a good whenever the price of Substitute goods downs?Answer: Whenever the price of substitute good downs, then the demand for the specified good too downs.

  • Q : Problem on Institutional frameworks I

    I have a problem in economics on Institutional frameworks. Please help me in the following question. The Institutional frameworks in which the transactions take place are: (1) Money mills. (2) Circular flows. (3) Barriers to entry. (4) Markets

  • Q : External costs and external benefits

    Question: (a)         Explain the impact of external costs and external benefits on resource allocation; (b)     

  • Q : Selling product below cost by predatory

    Nintendo Co. of Japan has been accused of discarding its products (as selling below cost) upon the U.S. market that harms U.S. producers. When true, it is an illustration of: (w) excessive international competition. (x) protectionism. (y) aggressive advertising. (z) p

  • Q : Negatively-sloped straight line in

    When a demand curve is a negatively-sloped straight line, in that case demand is perfectly: (w) elastic where quantity demanded is zero. (x) elastic where price is zero. (y) inelastic where quantity demanded is zero. (z) elastic or inelastic all over

  • Q : Family Allowance Plans for Income

    Government payments generally provided into European nations which are roughly sufficient to feed and clothe each child within a family are parts of programs termed as: (w) Family Allowance Plans [FAPs]. (x) negative income taxes [NITs]. (y) indigent subsidy plans [IS

  • Q : Horizontal summation of individual

    The purely competitive industry’s demand for the labor is: (i) Less elastic than the horizontal summation of individual firm’s demands. (ii) Perfectly elastic. (iii) Upward sloping as of the diminishing marginal returns to labor. (iv) Equi