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Target Competency Describe perfect competition, monopolistic competition, oligopoly, and monopoly Directions It is estimated that while world coffee prices hover around 50¢ per pound, production costs...

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Target Competency

Describe perfect competition, monopolistic competition, oligopoly, and monopoly

Directions

It is estimated that while world coffee prices hover around 50¢ per pound, production costs are around 80¢ per pound.According to a report issued in September 2002 by the relief agency Oxfam, prices are at their lowest in 100 years, thereby leaving 25 million farmers in crisis.Banks dependent on the industry are collapsing.

It is ironic that in a world of designer coffees – mochas and lattes – a worldwide glut of coffee beans has farmers and pickers suffering.One of the hardest hit places isNicaragua, where the coffee crop is wilting and the people are beginning to starve.

Oxfam accuses the roasting companies – Proctor & Gamble, Nestle SA, Kraft Foods Inc., Sara Lee Corp., and Tchibo Holding AG are the biggest – of profiting from the crisis and urges them to pay higher prices.The companies reply that they cannot be blamed for the oversupply, and that paying higher prices would encourage farmers to produce more coffee that nobody wants.

The company taking the most heat is Starbucks Corp., the designer-coffee maven, among the top ten coffee buyers in the world.This world-wide chain has a lot to lose if their customers, especially those of college age, see it as aThird Worldprofiteer.

“But the plight of the world’s financially struggling coffee farmer is a complicated one – and not all the fault of corporate coffee buyers.Farmers are caught up in the harsh world of commodity markets, where prices are based on supply and demand in a highly fragmented industry.A chronic coffee surplus has resulted in years of low prices.”

Sources: “For Coffee Growers, Not Even a Whiff of Profits,”Business Week, September 9, 2002, p. 110; and World Coffee Prices at 100-Year Low,”New York Times, September 18, 2002.

Questions:

1.Is the market for coffee perfectly competitive?

2.Does the coffee market meet all six conditions of a perfectly competitive market?

3.Which factor is not represented?

4.Do you buy the Starbuck’s argument that paying higher coffee prices will increase demand and will ultimately increase the glut?

5.Are the coffee growers operating at zero economic profit in the sense in which the chapter defines it?

Write your answers in a paper of no fewer than 500 words.

Submit this assignment to your instructor using the Assignment Dropbox labeled "LP6:Coffee Prices."

Answered Same Day Dec 22, 2021

Solution

David answered on Dec 22 2021
130 Votes
Coffee prices
1. No. Perfect competition is a market situation characterised by complete absences of rivalry among
market participants. In this market no participant buyer or seller is big enough to influence the market
to set the price and quantity. Though coffee growers are the suppliers they don’t directly supply it to
the market. It is the coffee roasting companies they directly buy it from growers and process it into
consumer product. There is no perfect competition in the coffee market because every coffee
marketing company has its own
and and unique identity in the market which helps them to control
the market. Major players incur a huge cost on advertisement to retain their unique identities and
customer loyalties that empower them to make the market imperfect. In this world nothing is hundred
percent perfect and perfectly competitive markets is only an ideal market.
2. No. Characteristics of perfectly competitive market...
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