A manufacturer should keep producing as long as each additional unit adds more to revenue than it costs to make. Stop when the next unit costs as much as it earns. Produce beyond that point and profit falls. That logic — elegant in its simplicity — is the profit-maximization rule, and it applies identically whether the firm is a wheat farmer, a software giant, or a pharmaceutical monopolist. The market structure changes what MR looks like; the rule stays the same.
In plain terms
The profit-maximization rule states: produce the quantity where Marginal Revenue (MR) = Marginal Cost (MC).
- If MR > MC: the additional unit adds more to total revenue than to total cost. Profit increases. Produce it.
- If MR < MC: the additional unit costs more than it earns. Profit decreases. Don't produce it.
- If MR = MC: no further adjustment can increase profit. This is the optimum.
The rule does not guarantee positive profit — it guarantees the maximum profit given the cost and revenue conditions the firm faces. A firm losing money still applies the MR = MC rule to minimize its losses.
Why it works this way
Profit = Total Revenue – Total Cost. Profit is maximized where the gap between TR and TC is widest — which is mathematically where their slopes are equal. The slope of TR is MR; the slope of TC is MC. Setting them equal locates the widest gap.
For competitive firms: MR = P (constant, regardless of quantity). The condition MR = MC becomes P = MC. Competitive firms produce at the output where price equals marginal cost — the condition for allocative efficiency.
For monopolists and firms with market power: MR < P. The MR curve lies below the demand curve. Setting MR = MC produces an output lower than the competitive level, and the firm charges the price given by the demand curve at that output — always above MC. This is the source of the monopoly markup and deadweight loss.
The Bureau of Economic Analysis industry profit data captures the aggregate outcome of millions of firms applying this rule simultaneously — sectors with high marginal revenue relative to marginal cost (software, pharmaceuticals) show persistently high profits; sectors where MR and MC are driven together by competition (retail, commodities) show thin margins.
Worked example
A bakery faces a market price of $4 per loaf. Marginal costs:
| Loaves (per day) | MC |
|---|---|
| 1–50 | $2.00 |
| 51–80 | $3.50 |
| 81–100 | $4.00 |
| 101–110 | $5.00 |
MR = $4.00 (price-taker). The bakery should produce exactly 100 loaves — the last unit where MR = MC. The 101st loaf costs $5.00 to make but earns $4.00. Producing it destroys $1.00 of profit.
Why it matters
The MR = MC rule is the universal profit-optimization condition across all firm types and market structures. It links the firm's internal cost structure (MC) to its market environment (MR) and identifies the precise output level that maximizes the gap between them. Every pricing model, output decision, and market entry analysis in industrial economics begins from this condition.





