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  2. Monopolistic competition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopolistic_competition

    A monopolistically-competitive company might be said to be marginally inefficient because the company produces at an output where average total cost is not a minimum. A monopolistically competitive market is a productively inefficient market structure because marginal cost is less than price in the long run.

  3. Kinked demand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinked_demand

    A kink in an otherwise linear demand curve. Note how marginal costs can fluctuate between MC1 and MC3 without the equilibrium quantity or price changing. The Kinked-Demand curve theory is an economic theory regarding oligopoly and monopolistic competition. Kinked demand was an initial attempt to explain sticky prices.

  4. Imperfect competition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperfect_competition

    Furthermore, each firm shares a small percentage of the total monopolistic market and hence, has limited control over the prevailing market price. Thus, each firms' demand curve (unlike perfect competition) is downward sloping, rather than flat. The main difference between monopoly competition and perfect competition lies in the paradox of ...

  5. Monopoly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopoly

    Supply curve: in a perfectly competitive market there is a well defined supply function with a one-to-one relationship between price and quantity supplied. [25] In a monopolistic market no such supply relationship exists. A monopolist cannot trace a short-term supply curve because for a given price there is not a unique quantity supplied.

  6. Demand curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demand_curve

    Demand curves are used to estimate behaviour in competitive markets and are often combined with supply curves to find the equilibrium price (the price at which sellers together are willing to sell the same amount as buyers together are willing to buy, also known as market clearing price) and the equilibrium quantity (the amount of that good or ...

  7. Monopoly profit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopoly_profit

    [2] [3] Since a competitive market has many competing firms, a customer can buy widgets from any of the competing firms. [1] [4] [2] [5] Because of this tight competition, competing firms in a market each have their own horizontal demand curve that is fixed at a single price established by market equilibrium for the entire industry as a whole.

  8. Competition (economics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Competition_(economics)

    Within monopolistic competition market structures all firms have the same, relatively low degree of market power; they are all price makers, rather than price takers. In the long run, demand is highly elastic , meaning that it is sensitive to price changes.

  9. Lerner index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lerner_Index

    It means that there was a slight decrease in competition. Then, during 2006–2009, there was a decrease in the Lernex index. In 2010 the Lerner index significantly increased. The mean of the Lerner index computed for the full sample is 53.58 %, which do not confirm either monopoly or perfect competition in the credit market of Czech Republic.