Microeconomics
Perfect Competition
Idealized market — many buyers/sellers, identical products, free entry, full information
Perfect competition is an idealized market structure with: (1) Many buyers and sellers (no individual influence). (2) Homogeneous products (identical). (3) Free entry/exit. (4) Perfect information. (5) Price-takers (firms accept market price). Result: market reaches efficient equilibrium; price = marginal cost; zero economic profit long-run; consumer + producer surplus maximized. Theoretical benchmark — real markets rarely meet all conditions. Useful: shows what efficient markets look like; helps identify market failures. Examples (close to perfect): agricultural commodities, currency markets.
- ConditionsMany buyers/sellers, identical products, free entry, perfect info
- Price-takersFirms accept market price
- Long-run profitZero economic profit (normal accounting profit)
- EfficiencyMaximum consumer + producer surplus
- P = MCPrice equals marginal cost in equilibrium
- ExamplesAgricultural commodities (close); rarely fully met
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Why perfect competition matters
- Theoretical benchmark. Standard for efficiency.
- Market analysis. Identifying deviations.
- Antitrust. Detecting monopoly power.
- Public policy. Identifying market failures.
- Education. Foundation of microeconomics.
- Trade policy. Free trade ideal.
- Welfare economics. Maximum surplus benchmark.
Common misconceptions
- Real markets are perfect. Rarely; theoretical ideal.
- Profit always desirable. Zero in long-run competitive markets.
- One firm dominates. Many firms means none dominates.
- Deviation always bad. Sometimes corrects market failures.
- Always achievable. Many barriers (technology, regulation).
- Consumers always benefit. Yes — though distributionally complex.
Frequently asked questions
What's perfect competition?
Idealized market structure. Five conditions. (1) Many buyers and sellers; no individual large enough to influence price. (2) Homogeneous products (identical). (3) Free entry and exit. (4) Perfect information (everyone knows everything). (5) Mobile resources. Result: firms are price-takers (must accept market price). Realistic: rarely fully met; theoretical benchmark.
Why is it the benchmark?
Maximum economic efficiency. Allocative: P = MC means right amount produced (quantity where social benefit = social cost). Productive: firms produce at minimum cost. Consumer + producer surplus maximized. Zero deadweight loss. No externalities (assumed). Real markets compared to this ideal — closer = more efficient.
What's a price-taker?
Firm that must accept market price. Can't influence price by changing own quantity (too small relative to market). Demand curve for individual firm: horizontal at market price. Sells as much as wants at market price; nothing at higher; reduces revenue going lower. Different from price-makers (monopolists, oligopolists who can influence price).
Why zero long-run profit?
Free entry. Profitable industries attract new firms. Supply increases. Price falls. Eventually: economic profit zero (just covering all costs including opportunity cost). If economic loss: firms exit. Supply decreases. Price rises. Equilibrium: zero profit. Different from accounting profit (which excludes opportunity cost).
What's economic profit vs accounting profit?
Different. Accounting profit: revenue - explicit costs. Includes implicit returns. Economic profit: revenue - all costs including opportunity costs. Often: economic profit < accounting profit. Zero economic profit: just earning normal returns; could earn same elsewhere. Negative: should exit. Profit beyond zero: rare in competitive markets.
What are exceptions in real markets?
Most markets violate perfect competition conditions. (1) Differentiated products (brands matter): clothing, cars, restaurants. (2) Few sellers: oil, banks. (3) Information asymmetries: used cars. (4) Barriers to entry: technology, capital. (5) Government regulations. (6) Externalities. Most real markets: monopolistic competition, oligopoly, or monopoly. Perfect competition: theoretical ideal.
When does it apply?
Closest examples. (1) Agricultural commodities: many farmers, similar products, free entry. (2) Some currency exchange markets. (3) Stock markets: many participants, similar products, low transaction costs. Approximations: useful for analysis even if not fully met. Many models start with perfect competition assumptions; relax for specific cases.