Chapter 5: Forms of Market and Price Determination (Set-3)

Monopolistic competition is a market structure characterized by

A One seller and many buyers
B Few sellers with interdependence
C Many sellers with differentiated products
D Many sellers with homogeneous products

Product differentiation means

A Different prices for same product
B Physical and non-physical differences in products
C Different cost structures
D Different production techniques

Because of product differentiation, firms under monopolistic competition face

A Perfectly elastic demand
B Vertical demand curve
C Downward sloping demand curve
D Perfectly inelastic demand

In monopolistic competition, the demand curve faced by a firm is also its

A Supply curve
B Average revenue curve
C Marginal cost curve
D Long-run cost curve

In the short run, a firm under monopolistic competition can earn

A Only normal profit
B Only loss
C Supernormal profit, normal profit, or loss
D Zero profit always

Short-run equilibrium of a monopolistic competitor occurs where

A AR = AC
B MR = MC
C Price = MC
D TR = TC

In the short run, a monopolistically competitive firm earns supernormal profit when

A AR = AC
B AR > AC
C AR < AC
D MR = 0

In the long run, monopolistic competition leads to

A Supernormal profit
B Monopoly profit
C Normal profit only
D Continuous loss

Long-run equilibrium under monopolistic competition is characterized by

A AR = MC
B AR = minimum AC
C AR is tangent to AC
D MR = AR

Excess capacity under monopolistic competition means

A Firms operate at minimum AC
B Firms operate below minimum AC
C Firms operate above minimum AC
D Firms operate at maximum output

Excess capacity arises mainly because of

A Government regulation
B Free entry
C Product differentiation
D Price discrimination

A key difference between monopoly and monopolistic competition is that

A Monopoly has downward sloping demand
B Monopolistic competition has many sellers
C Monopoly has MR below AR
D Both restrict output

Selling costs are most significant in

A Perfect competition
B Monopoly
C Monopolistic competition
D Oligopoly

Selling costs mainly aim to

A Reduce cost of production
B Increase demand for the firm’s product
C Reduce market supply
D Increase marginal cost

In monopolistic competition, selling costs are considered

A Pure waste
B Productive cost
C Price-determining factor
D Investment cost

Which feature brings monopolistic competition closer to monopoly?

A Free entry
B Product differentiation
C Many sellers
D Price competition

Which feature brings monopolistic competition closer to perfect competition?

A Product differentiation
B Selling costs
C Free entry and exit
D Downward sloping demand

Oligopoly is a market structure with

A One seller
B Two sellers only
C Few dominant firms
D Many small firms

A distinguishing feature of oligopoly is

A Perfect information
B Interdependence among firms
C Product homogeneity only
D Free entry

Which industry is a typical example of oligopoly?

A Wheat farming
B Small retail shops
C Automobile industry
D Street vendors

Oligopoly may be classified into

A Pure and perfect
B Simple and complex
C Collusive and non-collusive
D Legal and illegal

In collusive oligopoly, firms

A Act independently
B Compete aggressively
C Cooperate to fix prices/output
D Always engage in price wars

A cartel is

A A government agency
B A buyers’ association
C A formal agreement among oligopolists
D A monopolistic competitor

Non-collusive oligopoly refers to

A Monopoly behavior
B Independent decision-making by firms
C Government-regulated pricing
D Perfect competition

The kinked demand curve model explains

A Price determination in monopoly
B Price rigidity in oligopoly
C Price discrimination
D Excess capacity

According to the kinked demand curve, demand is more elastic

A Above the kink
B Below the kink
C At the kink
D At zero output

Below the kink, demand is relatively inelastic because

A Rivals ignore price cuts
B Rivals follow price cuts
C Demand is perfectly elastic
D Costs are fixed

The kinked demand curve implies that marginal revenue curve has

A A smooth shape
B A discontinuous gap
C A vertical straight line
D Constant slope

Price rigidity in oligopoly occurs when

A Demand shifts frequently
B Cost changes fall within MR gap
C Firms collude perfectly
D Entry is free

The kinked demand curve theory was developed by

A Marshall
B Cournot
C Sweezy
D Chamberlin

A major limitation of kinked demand curve theory is that it

A Explains price wars
B Explains price rigidity only
C Does not explain initial price determination
D Explains collusion

In oligopoly, price leadership refers to

A Government fixing prices
B One firm setting price and others following
C Joint profit maximization
D Perfect competition

Which firm usually becomes price leader?

A Smallest firm
B Firm with highest cost
C Dominant or low-cost firm
D New entrant

Price leadership is a form of

A Perfect competition
B Explicit collusion
C Implicit collusion
D Monopoly pricing

In oligopoly, uncertainty arises mainly because

A Demand is perfectly elastic
B Firms are interdependent
C Costs are fixed
D Government controls price

Which curve is generally indeterminate in oligopoly?

A Demand curve
B Supply curve
C Cost curve
D Revenue curve

Game theory is often used to analyze

A Perfect competition
B Monopoly
C Oligopoly behavior
D Consumer equilibrium

A price war is most likely under

A Perfect competition
B Monopoly
C Oligopoly
D Monopolistic competition

Oligopolistic firms may avoid price competition by competing through

A Advertising
B Innovation
C Product quality
D All of the above

Collusive oligopoly aims to achieve

A Competitive price
B Monopoly-like profit
C Zero profit
D Perfect efficiency

A cartel breaks down mainly due to

A Homogeneous products
B Cheating by members
C Government support
D Free entry

Which market form shows the greatest interdependence?

A Perfect competition
B Monopoly
C Monopolistic competition
D Oligopoly

Under oligopoly, firms are often reluctant to change price because

A Costs never change
B Demand is fixed
C Rival reactions are uncertain
D Entry is free

Which feature distinguishes oligopoly from monopolistic competition?

A Many sellers
B Product differentiation
C Few sellers
D Selling costs

In oligopoly, price determination is best described as

A Automatic
B Indeterminate
C Fixed by government
D Perfectly predictable

The kinked demand curve explains rigidity at

A Very low prices
B Very high prices
C Prevailing market price
D Zero output

If marginal cost increases but remains within MR gap, oligopoly price

A Increases
B Decreases
C Remains unchanged
D Becomes zero

A firm in oligopoly considers rivals’ reactions mainly due to

A Many sellers
B Homogeneous products
C Strategic interdependence
D Perfect information

The main weakness of oligopoly models is that they

A Ignore demand
B Assume costless production
C Fail to give a single price theory
D Ignore profit

Monopolistic competition and oligopoly both involve

A Homogeneous products
B Many firms always
C Downward sloping demand curves
D Perfect information