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Standard 3 Market Structures

Standard 3 Market Structures. Market economies are characterized by competition. The effort of two or more people, acting independently, to get the business of others by offering the best deal Example: Macintosh and Windows PC. Monopoly.

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Standard 3 Market Structures

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  1. Standard 3Market Structures

  2. Market economies are characterized by competition • The effort of two or more people, acting independently, to get the business of others by offering the best deal • Example: Macintosh and Windows PC

  3. Monopoly • Only one seller- a single business controls the supply of a product that has no close substitutes • Control of prices- monopolies act as price makers because they sell products that have no close substitutes and they face no competition • Restricted, regulated market- government regulations or other barriers to entry keep other firms out of the market

  4. Oligopoly • Few sellers- only a few businesses dominate an entire market • Products can be • Standardized (identical) –ex. Steel, aluminum • differentiated products (different characteristics, quality, function) • More control of prices- decisions one seller makes may cause the other sellers to respond in the same way • Little freedom to enter or exit market- high start up costs

  5. Challenge Question • Are Microsoft and Apple monopolies or oligopolies? 2. Is Citizen’s Water, the only water company in Indy a monopoly or oligopoly?

  6. Dinner for 2 at the Cheesecake Factory $60

  7. Dinner for 2 at St. Elmo’s$120

  8. 2 Tickets to see your favorite basketball team $100

  9. Colts Season Tickets $1500

  10. 2 Tickets to go see your favorite band or musical $100

  11. Monopolistic Competition • Many sellers- sellers act independently in choosing what kind of product, how much and what price • Similar but differentiated products (ex. hamburger restaurants) • Limited control of prices- consumers will switch to a substitute if the price goes too high • Freedom to enter or exit market- relatively easy to start a small business, if it does not work, equipment can be sold

  12. What makes these restaurants different? • Quality and characteristics of food (non-price competition)

  13. Pure competition • Many buyers and sellers- a large number of buyers and sellers ensures that no one controls prices • Standardized product- all products are essentially the same • Freedom to enter and exit markets- producers can enter or exit the market with no interference • Independent buyers and sellers- buyers and sellers do not band together to influence prices • Well-informed buyers and sellers- both buyers and sellers know the market prices and other conditions

  14. Challenge Question 1 and 2 1. Is pizza normally bought from companies engaged in monopolistic competition or pure competition? 2. Is wood normally bought from companies engaged in monopolistic competition or pure competition?

  15. Challenge Questions 3-6 What market structure matches the example? 3. Chinese Food- #1 Chinese Buffet, China King, Side Wok Café, King Dragon, Tiger Lily 4. Lettuce 5. Lucy’s gas station, which is the only gas station within 100 miles of her town 6. Coke and Pepsi

  16. Impact of Monopolies, Regulation and Deregulation

  17. Predict • Why do you think monopolies could be bad?

  18. Why could it be considered bad to have a monopoly? • Monopolies have extensive control over price without competition- when paired with inelastic demand it could be really bad. • Inequality of wealth develops- really rich and really poor • Wealthy companies can buy out other companies and create monopolies in multiple industries

  19. Predict • How could monopolies be good?

  20. Read 7.2 and complete notes

  21. Reading Check- Cartels • Explain why OPEC would be classified as a cartel. • Oil producing countries act together to set prices and control the supply of oil. • Ex. 1973 oil crisis • OAPEC oil embargo due to US military support for Israel • Decreased supply and high prices caused economic recession

  22. Reading Check- Natural Monopoly • Example • Water Company • Why is there only one seller? • Costs are more efficient with one supplier • Why is the market restricted? • Economies of scale- cheaper to produce when larger because can spread fixed costs over larger population of buyers • How does it have control of prices? • Prices subject to government regulation- ensure they don’t charge too much

  23. Reading Check- Government Monopoly • Example • The Postal Service • Why is there only one seller? • Can’t be provided by private terms, not attractive bc insufficient profit • Why is the market restricted? • Market entry limited by government control • How does it have control of prices? • Prices determined by government regulation

  24. Reading Check- Technological Monopoly • Example • Polaroid • Why is there only one seller? • Ownership of invention/technology • Why is the market restricted? • Patents cause a barrier to entry (kept Kodak out of instant camera business) • How does it have control of prices? • Charges higher prices while the monopoly lasts

  25. Reading Check- Geographic Monopoly • Example • Professional Sports/ only gas station in town • Why is there only one seller? • No competition in the local area • Why is the market restricted? • Location or size limits # of suppliers • How does it have control of prices? • Charge higher prices due to lack of competition

  26. Do 4 Types of Monopolies on BW

  27. Bell Work • Monopoly C • Oligopoly A • Monopolistic Competition E • Pure Competition H • Natural Monopoly G • Government Monopoly B • Technological Monopoly D • Geographic Monopoly F • Industry in which only a few sellers offer a similar product • Business (that is typically not very profitable) that is run or authorized by the government that does not have any competitors • Least competitive market structure • Business that controls a manufacturing method or invention through a patent • Industry in which many sellers offer a similar but differentiated product • Business without nearby competitors • Business that exists when the lowest production costs occur with only one producer (economies of scale) • Industry in which many sellers sell a standardized product

  28. Regulation- the basics • Regulation-controlling business behavior through a set of rules or laws • Merger- joining of two firms to form a single firm • Trust- a group of firms combined for the purpose of reducing competition in an industry • Anti-trust legislation- laws that define monopolies and give government the power to control them and break them up

  29. Challenge Questions 1. Anti-Trust Legislation is a form of A) Merger B) Regulation 2. The joining of Chase and Fifth Third Bank would be a A) Merger B) Regulation

  30. Regulation to promote competition • During the 1800’s a few large trusts dominated the oil, steel, and railroad industries. • Standard Oil was comprised of 33 companies that owned 90% of US oil • U.S. government concerned they would use their power to control prices and limit output (supply) • As a result the government passed the Sherman Anti-Trust Act as a way to regulate monopolies • Prevent business practices that would reduce competition

  31. Challenge Questions 3 & 4 3. Why was there a need for the Sherman Anti-Trust Act? In the past, a few companies completely controlled the output and prices of their products 4. What does the Sherman Anti-Trust Act do? Regulate Monopolies (prevent practices that reduce competition)

  32. Antitrust Legislation Today • The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Department of Justice are responsible for assessing mergers • Larger firms are more efficient; lower operating costs led to lower prices for consumers • But, the government has to prevent mergers that concentrate the market into the hands of a few firms • Ex: Attempted merger of AT&T and T-Mobile

  33. Ways to level the playing field The FTC prevents these practices that limit competition… • Price fixing- occurs when businesses work together to set the price of competing products • Ex. 1990s 5 record companies enforced a “minimum advertised price” for CDs • Market allocation- occurs when businesses negotiate to divide up the market. By staying out of each other’s territory, businesses can become geographic monopolies, enabling them to charge higher prices. • Predatory Pricing- setting prices below cost so that smaller producers cannot afford to compete in a market.

  34. Consumer Protection Agencies • Government agencies that prevent unfair behavior to competitors and consumers

  35. Answer Consumer Protection Questions

  36. Deregulation • Deregulation involves actions taken to reduce or to remove government control of a business • Airlines were deregulated by the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978 • The government removed all control of airline routes and rates. Only safety regulations remained. • Ex 2- Financial Sector • Deregulation allowed mergers of large investment firms that contributed to the economic collapse

  37. In General REPUBLICANS DEMOCRATS Favor Regulation (They like more government) • Favor Deregulation (They like less Government) Business

  38. Forms of business organization • sole proprietorship • partnership • corporation

  39. Sole Proprietorship • A business owned and managed by a single person AdvantagesDisadvantages + easy to open or close - limited funds + few regulations* - limited life + freedom and control - unlimited liability* + owner keeps profits Regulation= (gov’t) controlling business behavior through a set of rules or laws Liability= legal responsibility for something, especially costs

  40. Partnership • A business co-owned by two or more people who agree on how responsibilities, profits and losses will be divided AdvantagesDisadvantages + easy to open and close - unlimited liability + few regulations - potential for conflict + access to resources - limited life + joint decision making + specialization

  41. Corporation • A business owned by individuals, called shareholders or stockholders AdvantagesDisadvantages + access to resources - start-up cost and + professional managers effort + limited liability - heavy regulation + unlimited life - double taxation - loss of control

  42. Compare and contrast the following forms of business organization: • sole proprietorship • partnership • corporation

  43. The three basic ways businesses finance operations • Retained earnings • Reinvesting $ they have earned • Stock issues • When people buy stocks, they company gets that $ • Borrowing • Banks lend money to business, just like they do to people

  44. Economic institutions that help members and clients accomplish their goals without trying to make a profit • Labor unions (an organization of workers who collectively seek to improve work conditions) • Ex. Rail Road workers Union • Nonprofit organizations (aim to benefit society, not to make a profit) • Ex. Red Cross, Salvation Army, Herron High School • Cooperatives (operated for the shared benefit of the owners, who are also its customers) • Ex. Credit Union

  45. Nonprofit organizations • With a partner list as many nonprofit organizations as you can

  46. Profit • The profit motive, a key feature of a market economy, insures that resources will be allocated efficiently, since inefficiency would result in lower profits • Serves as a reward for hard work and innovation • Entrepreneurs accept the risks of business failure in return for the possibility of making a profit

  47. Competition • Businesses engage in both: • Price competition • Non-price competition • Celebrity Endorsements • Advertisements • Free Gifts

  48. Review • Which form of business organization is owned by individuals, called shareholders or stockholders? • Partnership • Sole proprietorship • Corporation

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