Why do short-run profits in a perfectly competitive industry tend to disappear over time?
Economic profits tend to exist only in the short run in a perfectly competitive industry because an increase in demand causes firms to earn economic profits, attracting new firms to the industry. New firms continue to enter, increasing the market supply and reducing the price of the product, until economic profits are reduced to zero.
Economics
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Assuming that firms do not collude, compare the market outcome under oligopoly with the outcome under perfect competition
What will be an ideal response?
Economics
An individual bank can lend out at most its
a. actual reserves b. fractional reserves c. legal reserves d. demand deposits e. excess reserves
Economics