![]() A perfectly competitive firm maximizes profit by producing the quantity of output that equates marginal revenue and marginal cost. As such, the firm moves along its positively-sloped marginal cost curve in response to changing prices. A perfectly competitive firm maximizes profit by producing the quantity of output that equates price and marginal cost. ![]() PERFECT COMPETITION, SHORT-RUN SUPPLY CURVE: A perfectly competitive firm's supply curve is that portion of its marginal cost curve that lies above the minimum of the average variable cost curve. There are, however, limits on who can be an owner of an S corporation. The profit of an S corporation is considered the income of its owners and is thus taxable only as individual income. S CORPORATION: A legal firm type that is officially structure as a corporation, especially with limited liability of the owners, but is able to avoid the double taxation of profits through the use of a special section of the Internal Revenue Service tax code (Chapter S). ![]() AmosWEB means Economics with a Touch of Whimsy!
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