Deck 16: Monopolistic Competition

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Question
A profit-maximizing firm in a monopolistically competitive market charges a price equal to marginal cost.
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Question
A markup of price over marginal cost is inconsistent with free entry and zero profit.
Question
The market for wheat is most likely considered a monopolistically competitive market.
Question
There are four basic types of market structure.
Question
Monopolistic competition is the only market structure that features many sellers.
Question
Oligopoly is characterized by a few sellers offering similar products, whereas monopolistic competition is characterized by many sellers offering differentiated products.
Question
Monopolistically competitive firms, like monopoly firms, maximize their profits by charging a price that exceeds marginal cost.
Question
Monopolistic competition is characterized by many buyers and sellers, product differentiation, and barriers to entry.
Question
A monopolistically competitive market is characterized by barriers to entry.
Question
Monopolistic competition and monopoly are examples of a market structure called imperfect competition.
Question
The "competition" in monopolistically competitive markets is most likely a result of having many sellers in the market.
Question
Monopolistic competition is characterized by a few sellers offering similar products, whereas oligopoly is characterized by many sellers offering differentiated products.
Question
For a profit-maximizing firm in a monopolistically competitive market, when price is equal to average total cost, price must lie above marginal cost.
Question
Monopolistic competition is characterized by many buyers and sellers, product differentiation, and free entry.
Question
Oligopoly and monopolistic competition are examples of a market structure called imperfect competition.
Question
The "monopoly" in monopolistically competitive markets is most likely a result of firms having some pricing power due to product differentiation.
Question
A profit-maximizing firm in a monopolistically competitive market can earn positive, negative, or zero profits in the short run.
Question
Product differentiation always leads to some measure of market power.
Question
A firm in a monopolistically competitive market can earn both short-run and long-run profits.
Question
To be considered an oligopoly, the market must have a concentration ratio below 50%.
Question
The term excess capacity refers to the fact that a firm operates on the upward-sloping portion of its average-total-cost curve.
Question
A firm in a monopolistically competitive market is usually indifferent to an additional customer walking through the door, since a sale to that customer will not increase the firm's profit.
Question
In the long run, monopolistically competitive firms produce where demand equals average total cost.
Question
In the long run, monopolistically competitive firms produce where demand equals marginal cost.
Question
When a firm in a monopolistically competitive market earns zero economic profit, its product price must equal marginal cost.
Question
When a firm operates with excess capacity, it must be in a monopolistically competitive market.
Question
In a monopolistically competitive market, the demand curves faced by incumbent firms are unaffected by the entry of new firms into the market.
Question
In a long-run equilibrium, firms in both perfectly competitive markets and monopolistically competitive markets produce a quantity below the efficient scale of production.
Question
In a monopolistically competitive market, the number of firms adjusts until economic profits are driven to zero.
Question
When a profit-maximizing firm in a monopolistically competitive market is in long-run equilibrium, marginal cost must lie below average total cost.
Question
The product-variety externality states that entry of a new firm conveys a negative externality on consumers.
Question
When a monopolistically competitive firm is in a long-run equilibrium, the values of marginal cost, average total cost, and price are all the same.
Question
The product-variety externality states the benefits to consumers from the introduction of a new product.
Question
In a long-run equilibrium, both perfectly competitive markets and monopolistically competitive markets have price equal to average total cost.
Question
When a firm operates at efficient scale, it is producing at the minimum point on its average total cost curve.
Question
A monopolistically competitive firm faces a downward-sloping demand curve because there are few firms in the market.
Question
A firm in a monopolistically competitive market can earn short-run profits but not long-run profits.
Question
Excess capacity characterizes firms in monopolistically competitive markets, even in situations of long-run equilibrium.
Question
A firm that would experience higher average total cost by increasing production is operating with excess capacity.
Question
The term excess capacity refers to the fact that a firm produces a lower quantity than it would if it operated at the efficient scale.
Question
The business-stealing externality states that entry of a new firms imposes a cost on existing firms because they lose customers.
Question
Critics of advertising argue that firms use advertising to manipulate consumers' tastes.
Question
The product-variety externality and the business-stealing externality are both spillover benefits of new firms entering a monopolistically competitive market.
Question
Economists are unanimous in their belief that advertising is socially inefficient.
Question
Defenders of advertising argue that firms use advertising as a signal of quality, even if the advertising delivers little helpful information about the product.
Question
One thing that both critics of advertising and defenders of advertising agree on is that advertising fosters competition.
Question
The Mikati Philippines Hard Rock Cafe has the exact same menu as the Hard Rock Cafe in New York. This is an example of a brand name enhancing market efficiency for U.S. tourists visiting the Philippines.
Question
Economists who argue that advertising enhances market efficiency suggest that celebrity advertising signals inferior product quality.
Question
When advertising is used to relay information about price, each firm is able to enhance market power.
Question
When McDonald's opens a store in Dhaka, Bangladesh, it has a strong incentive to enforce product quality consistent with stores in the United States.
Question
The debate over whether advertising serves a valuable purpose in society is definitively answered by economists who study the tastes and preferences of individuals.
Question
Critics of advertising argue that advertising leads to less elastic demand for products and a larger markup of price over marginal cost.
Question
Advertising during the Super Bowl is an example of information about quality contained primarily in the existence and expense of the advertising.
Question
The product-variety externality and the business-stealing externality are both spillover costs of new firms entering a monopolistically competitive market.
Question
The claim that advertising reduces the elasticity of demand is likely to be made by a defender of advertising.
Question
Brand names are rarely used to convey information about product quality.
Question
If advertising decreases the elasticity of demand for specific brand names of hard liquor, we would expect firms to be able to charge a larger markup over marginal cost.
Question
The government of Italy will not allow any Hard Rock Cafe restaurants to open in Italy. Defenders of the efficiency of brand-name markets would argue that this has hindered restaurant market efficiency in Italy.
Question
Policymakers have generally come to accept the view that advertising enhances the efficiency of markets.
Question
Empirical evidence suggests that advertising usually leads to an increase in the price for advertised products.
Question
Suppose there is a market in which the firms hold the following market shares: 25%, 20%, 18%, 15%, 8%, 7%, 4%, 2%, 1%. What is the concentration ratio for this market?
Question
​A monopolistically competitive firm is a price-taker.
Question
​A monopolistically competitive firm cannot earn an economic profit in the long run.
Question
There is general disagreement among economists about the role of advertising, but there is widespread agreement about the role of brand names on market efficiency.
Question
Table 16-5
A monopolistically competitive firm faces the following demand schedule for its product. In addition, the firm has total fixed costs equal to 20.
Table 16-5 A monopolistically competitive firm faces the following demand schedule for its product. In addition, the firm has total fixed costs equal to 20.   Refer to Table 16-5. When this firm profit maximizes and faces a constant marginal cost of $7, what is the amount of its markup over marginal cost?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Table 16-5. When this firm profit maximizes and faces a constant marginal cost of $7, what is the amount of its markup over marginal cost?
Question
Consider two industries in which firms hold the following market shares:
Industry A: 25%, 20%, 18%, 15%, 8%, 7%, 4%, 2%, 1%
Industry B: 30%, 10%, 9%, 8%, 8%, 8%, 8%, 6%, 6%, 5%, 2%
What are the concentration ratios for each industry? Which is more competitive?
Question
Which market structure(s) is(are) imperfectly competitive?
Question
The market structure in which each firm has a monopoly over the product it makes, but many other firms make similar products that compete for the same customers is called
Question
Table 16-5
A monopolistically competitive firm faces the following demand schedule for its product. In addition, the firm has total fixed costs equal to 20.
Table 16-5 A monopolistically competitive firm faces the following demand schedule for its product. In addition, the firm has total fixed costs equal to 20.   Refer to Table 16-5. If this firm has a constant marginal cost of $7, what is the profit-maximizing level of output?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Table 16-5. If this firm has a constant marginal cost of $7, what is the profit-maximizing level of output?
Question
Which type of market structure has the fewest number of firms?
Question
​In the long run, a monopolistically competitive firm's demand curve becomes more elastic and shifts to the left
Question
Free entry eliminates long-run profits for firms in competitive and monopolistic industries.
Question
​If a monopolistically competitive firms incurs an increase in fixed costs, its price will rise and its output will fall.
Question
Firms in monopolistically competitive markets and monopolies can earn long-run profits due to barriers to entry.
Question
Which market structure(s) is(are) considered highly concentrated?
Question
Economists measure a market's domination by a small number of firms with a statistic called the
Question
The government may not be able to improve the inefficiencies of a monopolistically competitive market.
Question
​In the long run, a monopolistically competitive firm produces at efficient scale.
Question
Which market structure(s) include(s) many firms with differentiated products who can enter and exit the market freely?
Question
Describe the shape of the monopolistically competitive firm's demand curve.
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Deck 16: Monopolistic Competition
1
A profit-maximizing firm in a monopolistically competitive market charges a price equal to marginal cost.
False
2
A markup of price over marginal cost is inconsistent with free entry and zero profit.
False
3
The market for wheat is most likely considered a monopolistically competitive market.
False
4
There are four basic types of market structure.
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5
Monopolistic competition is the only market structure that features many sellers.
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6
Oligopoly is characterized by a few sellers offering similar products, whereas monopolistic competition is characterized by many sellers offering differentiated products.
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7
Monopolistically competitive firms, like monopoly firms, maximize their profits by charging a price that exceeds marginal cost.
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8
Monopolistic competition is characterized by many buyers and sellers, product differentiation, and barriers to entry.
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9
A monopolistically competitive market is characterized by barriers to entry.
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10
Monopolistic competition and monopoly are examples of a market structure called imperfect competition.
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11
The "competition" in monopolistically competitive markets is most likely a result of having many sellers in the market.
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12
Monopolistic competition is characterized by a few sellers offering similar products, whereas oligopoly is characterized by many sellers offering differentiated products.
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13
For a profit-maximizing firm in a monopolistically competitive market, when price is equal to average total cost, price must lie above marginal cost.
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14
Monopolistic competition is characterized by many buyers and sellers, product differentiation, and free entry.
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15
Oligopoly and monopolistic competition are examples of a market structure called imperfect competition.
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16
The "monopoly" in monopolistically competitive markets is most likely a result of firms having some pricing power due to product differentiation.
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17
A profit-maximizing firm in a monopolistically competitive market can earn positive, negative, or zero profits in the short run.
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18
Product differentiation always leads to some measure of market power.
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19
A firm in a monopolistically competitive market can earn both short-run and long-run profits.
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20
To be considered an oligopoly, the market must have a concentration ratio below 50%.
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21
The term excess capacity refers to the fact that a firm operates on the upward-sloping portion of its average-total-cost curve.
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22
A firm in a monopolistically competitive market is usually indifferent to an additional customer walking through the door, since a sale to that customer will not increase the firm's profit.
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23
In the long run, monopolistically competitive firms produce where demand equals average total cost.
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24
In the long run, monopolistically competitive firms produce where demand equals marginal cost.
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25
When a firm in a monopolistically competitive market earns zero economic profit, its product price must equal marginal cost.
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26
When a firm operates with excess capacity, it must be in a monopolistically competitive market.
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27
In a monopolistically competitive market, the demand curves faced by incumbent firms are unaffected by the entry of new firms into the market.
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28
In a long-run equilibrium, firms in both perfectly competitive markets and monopolistically competitive markets produce a quantity below the efficient scale of production.
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29
In a monopolistically competitive market, the number of firms adjusts until economic profits are driven to zero.
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30
When a profit-maximizing firm in a monopolistically competitive market is in long-run equilibrium, marginal cost must lie below average total cost.
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31
The product-variety externality states that entry of a new firm conveys a negative externality on consumers.
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32
When a monopolistically competitive firm is in a long-run equilibrium, the values of marginal cost, average total cost, and price are all the same.
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33
The product-variety externality states the benefits to consumers from the introduction of a new product.
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34
In a long-run equilibrium, both perfectly competitive markets and monopolistically competitive markets have price equal to average total cost.
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35
When a firm operates at efficient scale, it is producing at the minimum point on its average total cost curve.
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36
A monopolistically competitive firm faces a downward-sloping demand curve because there are few firms in the market.
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37
A firm in a monopolistically competitive market can earn short-run profits but not long-run profits.
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38
Excess capacity characterizes firms in monopolistically competitive markets, even in situations of long-run equilibrium.
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39
A firm that would experience higher average total cost by increasing production is operating with excess capacity.
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40
The term excess capacity refers to the fact that a firm produces a lower quantity than it would if it operated at the efficient scale.
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41
The business-stealing externality states that entry of a new firms imposes a cost on existing firms because they lose customers.
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42
Critics of advertising argue that firms use advertising to manipulate consumers' tastes.
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43
The product-variety externality and the business-stealing externality are both spillover benefits of new firms entering a monopolistically competitive market.
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44
Economists are unanimous in their belief that advertising is socially inefficient.
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45
Defenders of advertising argue that firms use advertising as a signal of quality, even if the advertising delivers little helpful information about the product.
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k this deck
46
One thing that both critics of advertising and defenders of advertising agree on is that advertising fosters competition.
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k this deck
47
The Mikati Philippines Hard Rock Cafe has the exact same menu as the Hard Rock Cafe in New York. This is an example of a brand name enhancing market efficiency for U.S. tourists visiting the Philippines.
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k this deck
48
Economists who argue that advertising enhances market efficiency suggest that celebrity advertising signals inferior product quality.
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k this deck
49
When advertising is used to relay information about price, each firm is able to enhance market power.
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50
When McDonald's opens a store in Dhaka, Bangladesh, it has a strong incentive to enforce product quality consistent with stores in the United States.
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51
The debate over whether advertising serves a valuable purpose in society is definitively answered by economists who study the tastes and preferences of individuals.
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k this deck
52
Critics of advertising argue that advertising leads to less elastic demand for products and a larger markup of price over marginal cost.
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53
Advertising during the Super Bowl is an example of information about quality contained primarily in the existence and expense of the advertising.
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54
The product-variety externality and the business-stealing externality are both spillover costs of new firms entering a monopolistically competitive market.
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k this deck
55
The claim that advertising reduces the elasticity of demand is likely to be made by a defender of advertising.
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k this deck
56
Brand names are rarely used to convey information about product quality.
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57
If advertising decreases the elasticity of demand for specific brand names of hard liquor, we would expect firms to be able to charge a larger markup over marginal cost.
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Unlock for access to all 246 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
58
The government of Italy will not allow any Hard Rock Cafe restaurants to open in Italy. Defenders of the efficiency of brand-name markets would argue that this has hindered restaurant market efficiency in Italy.
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k this deck
59
Policymakers have generally come to accept the view that advertising enhances the efficiency of markets.
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k this deck
60
Empirical evidence suggests that advertising usually leads to an increase in the price for advertised products.
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k this deck
61
Suppose there is a market in which the firms hold the following market shares: 25%, 20%, 18%, 15%, 8%, 7%, 4%, 2%, 1%. What is the concentration ratio for this market?
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62
​A monopolistically competitive firm is a price-taker.
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63
​A monopolistically competitive firm cannot earn an economic profit in the long run.
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64
There is general disagreement among economists about the role of advertising, but there is widespread agreement about the role of brand names on market efficiency.
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65
Table 16-5
A monopolistically competitive firm faces the following demand schedule for its product. In addition, the firm has total fixed costs equal to 20.
Table 16-5 A monopolistically competitive firm faces the following demand schedule for its product. In addition, the firm has total fixed costs equal to 20.   Refer to Table 16-5. When this firm profit maximizes and faces a constant marginal cost of $7, what is the amount of its markup over marginal cost?
Refer to Table 16-5. When this firm profit maximizes and faces a constant marginal cost of $7, what is the amount of its markup over marginal cost?
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66
Consider two industries in which firms hold the following market shares:
Industry A: 25%, 20%, 18%, 15%, 8%, 7%, 4%, 2%, 1%
Industry B: 30%, 10%, 9%, 8%, 8%, 8%, 8%, 6%, 6%, 5%, 2%
What are the concentration ratios for each industry? Which is more competitive?
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67
Which market structure(s) is(are) imperfectly competitive?
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68
The market structure in which each firm has a monopoly over the product it makes, but many other firms make similar products that compete for the same customers is called
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69
Table 16-5
A monopolistically competitive firm faces the following demand schedule for its product. In addition, the firm has total fixed costs equal to 20.
Table 16-5 A monopolistically competitive firm faces the following demand schedule for its product. In addition, the firm has total fixed costs equal to 20.   Refer to Table 16-5. If this firm has a constant marginal cost of $7, what is the profit-maximizing level of output?
Refer to Table 16-5. If this firm has a constant marginal cost of $7, what is the profit-maximizing level of output?
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70
Which type of market structure has the fewest number of firms?
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71
​In the long run, a monopolistically competitive firm's demand curve becomes more elastic and shifts to the left
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72
Free entry eliminates long-run profits for firms in competitive and monopolistic industries.
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73
​If a monopolistically competitive firms incurs an increase in fixed costs, its price will rise and its output will fall.
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74
Firms in monopolistically competitive markets and monopolies can earn long-run profits due to barriers to entry.
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75
Which market structure(s) is(are) considered highly concentrated?
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76
Economists measure a market's domination by a small number of firms with a statistic called the
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77
The government may not be able to improve the inefficiencies of a monopolistically competitive market.
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78
​In the long run, a monopolistically competitive firm produces at efficient scale.
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79
Which market structure(s) include(s) many firms with differentiated products who can enter and exit the market freely?
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80
Describe the shape of the monopolistically competitive firm's demand curve.
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