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Quantity sold | Price per unit | Total revenue | Average revenue | Marginal revenue |
1 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 |
2 | 5 | 10 | 5 | 4 |
3 | 4 | 12 | 4 | 2 |
4 | 3 | 12 | 3 | 0 |
5 | 2 | 10 | 2 | -2 |
6 | 1 | 6 | 1 | -4 |
1. A market structure, where there are numerous sellers, selling close substitute goods/services to the buyers, is monopolistic competition. A market structure, where there are many sellers selling similar products/services to the buyers, is ideal competition.
2. In perfect competition, the merchandise offered is standardized whereas in monopolistic competition product differentiation is there.
3. In monopolistic competition, every firm offers products at its own price. In perfect competition, the demand and provide forces determine the worth for the entire industry and each firm sells its product at that price.
4. Entry and Exit are comparatively easy in perfect competition than in monopolistic competition.
5. In monopolistic competition, average revenue (AR) is bigger than the marginal revenue (MR), i.e. to extend sales the firm has got to lower down its price. On the opposite hand, average revenue (AR) and marginal revenue (MR) curve coincide with one another in perfect competition.
6. Monopolistic competition, that exists practically. On the opposite hand, perfect competition is an imaginary situation which doesn't exist actually .
7. The demand curve as faced by a monopolistic competitor isn't flat, but rather downward-sloping, which suggests that the monopolistic competitor can raise its price without losing all of its customers or lower the worth and gain more customers. Since there are substitutes, the demand curve facing a monopolistically competitive firm is more elastic than that of an ideal competition where there are not any substitutes. If a monopolist raises its price, some consumers will choose to not purchase its product—but they're going to then got to buy a totally different product. However, when a monopolistic competitor raises its price, some consumers will choose to not purchase the merchandise in the least , but others will prefer to buy an identical product from another firm. If a monopolistic competitor raises its price, it'll not lose as many purchasers as would a monopoly competitive firm, but it'll lose more customers than would a monopoly that raised its prices.Below is that the topmost Comparison between Perfect Competition vs Monopolistic Competition are as follows –Basic Comparison between Perfect Competition vs Monopolistic Competition Perfect competition
Basic Comparison between Perfect Competition vs Monopolistic Competition | Perfect competition | Monopolistic Competition |
Number of seller/buyers | Many | Many |
Type of good/services offered | Homogeneous | Differentiated |
Does firm have pricing control over their own prices? | No – Price Takers | Yes – some pricing power |
Is marketing/branding important? | No | Yes – Key non-price competition |
Are entry barriers zero, low or high? | Zero entry Barrier | Low entry Barrier |
Does this market structure lead to allocated efficiency in the long run? | Yes, Price = MC | Not Quite (P>MC) |
Does this market structure lead to productive efficiency in the long run? | Yes | No |
Situation | Unrealistic | Realistic |
Demand curve slope | Horizontal, perfectly elastic | Downward sloping, relatively elastic |
A relation between Average Revenue (AR) and Marginal Revenue (MR) | Average Revenue = Marginal Revenue | Average Revenue > Marginal Revenue. |
1. A market structure, where there are numerous sellers, selling close substitute goods/services to the buyers, is monopolistic competition. A market structure, where there are many sellers selling similar products/services to the buyers, is ideal competition.
2. In perfect competition, the merchandise offered is standardized whereas in monopolistic competition product differentiation is there.
3. In monopolistic competition, every firm offers products at its own price. In perfect competition, the demand and provide forces determine the worth for the entire industry and each firm sells its product at that price.
4. Entry and Exit are comparatively easy in perfect competition than in monopolistic competition.
5. In monopolistic competition, average revenue (AR) is bigger than the marginal revenue (MR), i.e. to extend sales the firm has got to lower down its price. On the opposite hand, average revenue (AR) and marginal revenue (MR) curve coincide with one another in perfect competition.
6. Monopolistic competition, that exists practically. On the opposite hand, perfect competition is an imaginary situation which doesn't exist actually .
7. The demand curve as faced by a monopolistic competitor isn't flat, but rather downward-sloping, which suggests that the monopolistic competitor can raise its price without losing all of its customers or lower the worth and gain more customers. Since there are substitutes, the demand curve facing a monopolistically competitive firm is more elastic than that of an ideal competition where there are not any substitutes. If a monopolist raises its price, some consumers will choose to not purchase its product—but they're going to then got to buy a totally different product. However, when a monopolistic competitor raises its price, some consumers will choose to not purchase the merchandise in the least , but others will prefer to buy an identical product from another firm. If a monopolistic competitor raises its price, it'll not lose as many purchasers as would a monopoly competitive firm, but it'll lose more customers than would a monopoly that raised its prices.Below is that the topmost Comparison between Perfect Competition vs Monopolistic Competition are as follows –Basic Comparison between Perfect Competition vs Monopolistic Competition Perfect competition
Basic Comparison between Perfect Competition vs Monopolistic Competition | Perfect competition | Monopolistic Competition |
Number of seller/buyers | Many | Many |
Type of good/services offered | Homogeneous | Differentiated |
Does firm have pricing control over their own prices? | No – Price Takers | Yes – some pricing power |
Is marketing/branding important? | No | Yes – Key non-price competition |
Are entry barriers zero, low or high? | Zero entry Barrier | Low entry Barrier |
Does this market structure lead to allocated efficiency in the long run? | Yes, Price = MC | Not Quite (P>MC) |
Does this market structure lead to productive efficiency in the long run? | Yes | No |
Situation | Unrealistic | Realistic |
Demand curve slope | Horizontal, perfectly elastic | Downward sloping, relatively elastic |
A relation between Average Revenue (AR) and Marginal Revenue (MR) | Average Revenue = Marginal Revenue | Average Revenue > Marginal Revenue. |