Microeconomics,, 16th Canadian Edition

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13. 1 The Demand for Factors


Competitive Firm


A major distinction between firms in perfectly competitive markets and
firms in any other type of market is the shape of the demand curve facing
the firm.

Even though the demand curve for the entire industry is negatively sloped, each firm in a
perfectly competitive industry faces a horizontal demand curve because variations in the firm’s
output have no significant effect on market price.

The horizontal (perfectly elastic) demand curve does not indicate that the
firm could actually sell an infinite amount at the going price. It indicates,
rather, that any realistic variations in that firm’s production will leave
price unchanged because the effect on total industry output will be
negligible.

Figure 9-1 contrasts the market demand curve for the product of a
competitive industry with the demand curve that a single firm in that
industry faces. Applying Economic Concepts 9-1 provides an example of
the important difference between the firm’s demand curve and the market
demand curve. It uses a numerical example to show why the demand
curve facing any individual wheat farmer is very nearly perfectly elastic,
even though the market demand for wheat is quite inelastic.


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