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Individual vs. Market Supply Responsiveness
A competitive market consists of 50 identical firms. Each firm has an individual supply schedule where it will increase its output by exactly one unit for every $0.20 increase in the market price. If the entire market needs to increase its total output by one unit, what is the required price increase? Explain your reasoning.
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Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Economy
CORE Econ
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.8 Supply and demand: Markets with many buyers and sellers - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
A competitive market consists of 100 identical, independent farms that sell wheat. The owner of one farm calculates that to justify the extra cost of increasing their own output by 10 bushels, the market price would need to rise by $5. Based on this single farm's calculation, which of the following statements most accurately evaluates the responsiveness of the entire market?
Individual vs. Market Supply Responsiveness
Evaluating Market Supply Response
In a competitive market composed of numerous identical firms, if a single firm determines it needs a price increase of $1.50 to justify producing one additional unit of its product, it follows that the market as a whole also requires a price increase of $1.50 to increase its total output by one unit.
Calculating Market Supply Responsiveness
Analyzing Supply Responsiveness in a Local Coffee Market
Match each concept related to market supply with its most accurate description of price responsiveness or function.
A competitive market consists of 50 identical firms. For any given firm, a $1 increase in the market price leads it to increase its quantity supplied by 2 units. If the market price increases by $1, what will be the total increase in the quantity supplied for the entire market?
The Effect of Aggregation on Market Supply Elasticity
An economist is studying a competitive market with many identical firms. They plot two supply curves on a graph with the same price and quantity scales: one for a single, typical firm and another for the entire market. The economist observes that the market supply curve is significantly flatter than the individual firm's supply curve. What is the most accurate conclusion to be drawn from this observation?