Enter Values
Key Formulas
Model Assumptions
- Linear demand curve for each firm (P = a − bQ)
- Quadratic total cost: TC = FC + vQ + cQ² (rising MC = v + 2cQ)
- U-shaped ATC: ATC = FC/Q + v + cQ
- Free entry and exit drives LR profit to zero
- Product differentiation gives each firm market power
- LR entry/exit shifts only the demand intercept (a), not the slope (b)
- For educational purposes. Not financial advice. Market conventions simplified.
Short-Run Equilibrium
Long-Run Equilibrium (Zero Profit)
Efficiency Analysis
Formula Breakdown
Short-Run vs Long-Run
| Measure | Short Run | Long Run |
|---|---|---|
| Price vs ATC | P > ATC | P = ATC |
| Price vs MC | P > MC | P > MC (markup) |
| Profit | Positive | Zero |
| Entry/Exit | Entry | Equilibrium |
Understanding Monopolistic Competition
What is Monopolistic Competition?
Monopolistic competition is a market structure where many firms sell differentiated products with free entry and exit. Each firm faces a downward-sloping demand curve (due to product differentiation) but earns zero economic profit in the long run (due to free entry).
SR Demand: P = a − bQ → MR = a − 2bQ
SR Optimum: MR = MC → Qsr = (a − v) / (2b + 2c)
LR Tangency: P = ATC and slopes equal → Qlr = √(FC / (b + c))
The LR tangency point also satisfies MR = MC for the shifted demand curve.
Short-Run vs Long-Run Equilibrium
Short Run
Profit or loss possible
Firms maximize profit at MR = MC. Number of firms is fixed. Positive profit attracts entry; losses trigger exit.
Long Run
Zero economic profit
Entry/exit shifts demand until P = ATC (tangency). Firms still mark up P above MC, creating excess capacity.
Excess Capacity & Markup
Two key inefficiencies distinguish monopolistic competition from perfect competition:
- Excess capacity: Firms produce below efficient scale (Qlr < Qeff). They could lower average cost by producing more, but don't because it requires cutting price.
- Markup over MC: P > MC means some consumers willing to pay more than the cost of production are priced out. This creates deadweight loss.
- Zero profit paradox: P = ATC (zero profit) but P > MC (markup exists) because firms operate on the declining portion of ATC where ATC > MC.
Further Reading
Explore related topics to deepen your understanding of market structures and firm behavior:
- Monopolistic Competition — Full article on SR/LR equilibrium, excess capacity, and product differentiation
- Costs of Production — Understanding TC, MC, ATC, and the U-shaped cost curve
- Monopoly & Market Power — Compare monopoly pricing with monopolistic competition
Try these related microeconomics calculators:
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and assumes a simple linear demand curve with quadratic costs. Real-world monopolistically competitive markets involve more complex demand functions, dynamic entry/exit processes, and heterogeneous firms. This tool should not be used for business decisions.