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Lecture Notes - Chapter 13

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These lecture notes from Chapter 13 of *Microeconomics: Canada in the Global Environment (11th Edition)* explore monopolistic competition, a common market structure characterized by many firms offering differentiated products. The notes explain how firms set prices and output in the short run—earning profits or losses—and how long-run entry erodes economic profit. Graphs illustrate equilibrium conditions and inefficiencies such as excess capacity. The chapter also explains why firms spend heavily on advertising and brand development to attract and retain customers. Real-world examples, including restaurants and clothing brands, show how non-price competition shapes markets and consumer behavior in monopolistically competitive industries.

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Lecture Notes: Chapter 13 – Monopolistic Competition
Based on Microeconomics: Canada in the Global Environment (11th Edition)



Introduction

Monopolistic competition is one of the most common market structures in modern economies.
It combines elements of both perfect competition and monopoly, making it more realistic for
many service-based and retail industries. This chapter explores the characteristics of
monopolistic competition, how firms set price and output in the short and long run, and why
firms invest heavily in advertising and brand development. These features impact not only the
firm's profitability but also market efficiency and consumer choice.



1. Market Structures: Where Monopolistic Competition Fits

Markets can be categorized based on the number of firms, type of product, and ease of entry.
The four primary market structures are:

Market Structure Number of Firms Type of Product Barriers to Entry
Perfect Competition Many Identical None
Monopolistic Competition Many Differentiated Low
Oligopoly Few Identical or Differentiated High
Monopoly One Unique (no substitutes) Very High


2. Defining Monopolistic Competition

Key Characteristics

1. Many Firms
o Each firm has a small market share.
o No firm can control market price significantly.
2. Product Differentiation
o Each firm offers a slightly different product (in quality, features, branding, etc.).
o Products are close substitutes, but not perfect ones.
3. Free Entry and Exit
o Firms can enter and leave the industry easily in the long run.
4. Independent Decision Making
o Firms set their own prices and output decisions without considering competitors’
reactions.

Examples:

,  Coffee shops
 Hair salons
 Clothing brands
 Restaurants

Each firm competes on price, product quality, location, design, and marketing.



3. Price and Output Decisions in the Short Run

In the short run, firms in monopolistic competition behave like monopolies due to product
differentiation—they face a downward-sloping demand curve and have some price-setting
power.

Revenue Concepts

 Total Revenue (TR) = Price × Quantity
 Average Revenue (AR) = Price
 Marginal Revenue (MR): Change in TR from selling one more unit
o MR < Price because lowering the price increases quantity sold but reduces
revenue on all units



Profit Maximization Rule

The firm maximizes profit where:




Then the firm uses its demand curve to determine the price at that output.

Graph Description – Short-Run Equilibrium

 X-axis: Quantity of output
 Y-axis: Price and cost
 Demand curve (D): Downward sloping
 MR curve: Below the demand curve
 MC curve: U-shaped
 ATC curve: U-shaped
 Profit is the rectangle between price and ATC, from 0 to Q



Possible Outcomes:

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Subido en
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