FACTOR MARKET, EFFICIENCY: A factor market achieves efficiency in the allocation of resources by equating marginal revenue product to factor price. Perfect competition, as the efficiency benchmark, is the only market structure to satisfy this criterion and achieve factor market efficiency. Monopsony, oligopsony, and monopsonistic competition are inefficient because they equate marginal revenue product to marginal factor cost, both of which are greater than factor price.Factor market efficiency, like that for any market, is achieved by the equality between the value of the good produced and the value of goods not produced. The standard efficiency condition, for product markets, is the equality between price and marginal cost, where price is the value of the good produced and marginal cost is the value of goods not produced. For factor markets, marginal revenue product is the value of the good produced and factor price is the value of goods not produced. The Perfect Competition BenchmarkPerfect competition is the idealized market structure that achieves an efficient allocation of resources. The conditions of perfect competition--including (1) large number of small firms, (2) identical products sold by all firms, (3) freedom of entry into and exit out of the industry, and (4) perfect knowledge of prices and technology--ensure that perfect competition efficiently allocates resources. This, in fact, is a primary function of perfect competition: a market structure that illustrates perfection, the best of all possible resource allocation worlds.Perfect competition achieves efficiency because it is a price taker. Each buyer in a factor market pays the going market price established by the overall market. Because this factor price is constant, it is equal to both average factor cost and marginal factor cost. As such, a profit-maximizing buyer in perfect competition not only equates marginal factor cost to marginal revenue product, it also equates factor price to marginal revenue product, which satisfies the efficiency criterion. Taco Employment EfficiencyTo explore the efficiency of perfect competition in a factor market, consider the employment example offered by a hypothetical firm, Waldo's TexMex Taco World, as it employs taco-making workers.Because Waldo's Taco World is one of thousands of employers hiring the same basic type of worker and with each firm being a relatively small part of the overall market, it has no market control over the factor price. This makes Waldo's Taco World a price taker. To maximize profit, Waldo's Taco World hires the number of workers that equates marginal revenue product and marginal factor cost, but being perfectly competitive, this is also equal to the going factor market price. If the going factor market price is $10, then Waldo's Taco World employs workers until marginal revenue product is also $10. Waldo's Taco World satisfies the equality between factor price and marginal revenue product and achieves efficiency. To see why, a closer look at marginal revenue product and factor price seems in order.
Inefficiency AlternativesTo see that the equality between factor price and marginal product is efficient, consider what happens if this equality is not achieved. Suppose that factor price and marginal revenue product are not equal.
The Other Market StructuresNone of the other three factor market structures--monopsony, oligopsony, or monopsonistic competition--satisfy the efficiency condition. The reason for this rests with market control. Each of these market structures have some degree of control over the buying side of the factor market--monopsonistic competition has a little, oligopsony has a lot more, and monopsony has complete.This market control means that firms face positively-sloped factor supply curves. Higher factor prices must be paid to buy larger factor quantities. But with higher prices come higher marginal factor cost, and marginal factor cost that exceeds factor price. At each factor quantity marginal factor cost is greater than factor price. As such, when firms operating in monopsony, oligopsony, or monopsonistic competition hire the profit-maximizing factor quantity, they do so by equating marginal factor cost and marginal revenue product. But, because marginal factor cost exceeds factor price, marginal revenue product also exceeds factor price. In other words, firms with buying-side factor market control do not devote enough resources to the production of a good. To achieve efficiency they need to hire a greater factor quantity with lower opportunity cost and produce more output with greater value. Check Out These Related Terms... | factor market analysis | perfect competition, factor market analysis | monopsony, factor market analysis | monopoly, factor market analysis | bilateral monopoly, factor market analysis | monopsony, efficiency | Or For A Little Background... | factors of production | factor demand | factor supply | production | factor payments | market structures | marginal revenue product | marginal factor cost | efficiency | perfect competition | monopsony | oligopsony | monopsonistic competition | market structures | market control | And For Further Study... | monopsony, minimum wage | marginal productivity theory | compensating wage differentials | marginal revenue product and factor demand | Recommended Citation: FACTOR MARKET, EFFICIENCY, AmosWEB Encyclonomic WEB*pedia, http://www.AmosWEB.com, AmosWEB LLC, 2000-2025. [Accessed: December 16, 2025]. |
