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Which shows the output supplied by a firm and its total revenue; as this is a competitive market structure, how does the marginal revenue change with quantity?

a) Increases linearly
b) Stays constant
c) Decreases linearly
d) Fluctuates randomly

1 Answer

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Final answer:

In a competitive market structure, the marginal revenue for a firm changes with quantity produced.

Step-by-step explanation:

As a perfectly competitive firm produces a greater quantity of output, its total revenue steadily increases at a constant rate determined by the given market price. Profits will be highest (or losses will be smallest) at the quantity of output where total revenues exceed total costs by the greatest amount (or where total revenues fall short of total costs by the smallest amount). Alternatively, profits will be highest where marginal revenue, which is price for a perfectly competitive firm, is equal to marginal cost. If the market price faced by a perfectly competitive firm is above average cost at the profit-maximizing quantity of output, then the firm is making profits. If the market price is below average cost at the profit-maximizing quantity of output, then the firm is making losses.

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