In a perfectly competitive market, firms are price takers, and the short-run equilibrium output is determined where marginal cost (MC) equals marginal revenue (MR), which equals the market price (P). Changes that affect MC shift the equilibrium output, while those that don’t affect MC leave output unchanged.
- (A) Increase in fixed cost: Fixed costs (e.g., rent) do not affect MC, as MC depends on variable costs (e.g., labor, materials). Thus, equilibrium output remains unchanged, though profits decrease.
- (B) Lump-sum tax: A lump-sum tax is a fixed amount, independent of output, acting like a fixed cost. It does not alter MC, so equilibrium output is unaffected, but profits are reduced.
- (C) Profit tax: A tax on profits reduces net profit but does not affect MC or the output decision, as firms still maximize profit where MC = MR.
- (D) Specific sales tax (per unit): A per-unit tax increases the variable cost of production, shifting the MC curve upward. This changes the equilibrium output, as firms produce less to equate the new MC with MR.
Thus, (A), (B), and (C) do not affect the short-run equilibrium output, making option (1) correct.