1 / 20

Between Competition and Monopoly Ch. 12:Monopolistic Competition Ch. 13: Oligopoly

Between Competition and Monopoly Ch. 12:Monopolistic Competition Ch. 13: Oligopoly. Econ 2420. Origin of Monopolistic Competition. There was much debate among economists before it was included into the economic principles mainstream because this market is similar to monopoly in many respects

havily
Download Presentation

Between Competition and Monopoly Ch. 12:Monopolistic Competition Ch. 13: Oligopoly

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Between Competition and MonopolyCh. 12:Monopolistic CompetitionCh. 13: Oligopoly Econ 2420

  2. Origin of Monopolistic Competition • There was much debate among economists before it was included into the economic principles mainstream because this market is similar to monopoly in many respects • Contributors to its development include: -Edward Chamberlain- 1933- The Theory of Monopolistic Competition -Joan Robinson- 1933- The Theory of Imperfect Competition

  3. Ch.12: Monopolistic competition 1. Features of monopolistic competition • Relatively large number of small sellers competing for the same group of customers • Each firm produces slightly differentiatedproducts • Entry into the industry is relatively easy. 2. Product differentiation is the main distinguishing feature of this market from the rest.

  4. 3. Examples: Starbucks coffee house, fast food restaurants, gas stations, dry cleaners, grocery stores (Retail and service industries belong to monopolistic competition) 4. The short-run price and output decisions are similar to that of monopoly i.e. A firm in this industry can make profit, break-even, operate at a loss provided AVC<price<ATC, or minimize losses by going out of business if price ≤ AVC (See the SR cases for Monopoly). The main difference is that the demand for a firm in monopolistic competition is relatively more elastic than the demand for the monopolist.

  5. Monopoly vs Monopolistic Competition P P P P1 P2 D D Q Q Q1 Q1 Q2 Q2 Monopoly Monopolistic Competition

  6. 5. A firm in monopolistic competition will be in long-run by producing the rate of output for which MR=LRMC and price=LRAC. Therefore, the firm’s profit is zero in the LR. Why? See graph P LRMC LRAC=P LRAC Pc Excess Capacity= 165-90=75 D=P Q 165 90 MR

  7. 6.There exists an underutilization (misallocation) of resources in monopolistic competition because firms will not utilize their maximum capacity by producing at the lowest average per unit cost. This excess capacity is referred to as “wastes of monopolistic competition.” . Chamberlain argues that this is not necessarily a “waste” of resources, but a price that consumers pay for getting variety, quality, and service.

  8. 7. Forms of non-price competition • Product differentiation • Product quality improvements • Advertising

  9. 8. Cases for advertising • . informs consumers of new products • .supports the communication industry • .stimulates product development Cases against advertising • .persuasion not information • .wastes of resources • .sometimes it is misleading • .increases in costs which are passed to consumers

  10. Ch. 13: Oligopoly 1. Basic features or characteristics • It is a market of few large firms with significant market power • Its products may be identical or differentiated • There is recognized “mutual interdependence • Entry into the industry is difficult due to financial and other barriers • 2.Examples: Automobile, Chemical industry, steel, airlines, long distance telephone

  11. Oligopoly • 3. There is recognized “mutual interdependence,” meaning that the action of any one oligopoly firm has a significant impact on the profitability of the other firm(s). • Suppose GM unilaterally reduces the price of Buick cars, how would this affect the sales at Ford Taurus and profits? • Because of a possible reaction to any action by a given firm, there is no single model for determining price and output in oligopoly.

  12. 4. Price and Output decisions under oligopoly are very difficult due to the “mutual interdependence” of firms i.e. the uncertainty of how the actions of one firm has a significant impact on other firms’ profits. Hence price and output decisions are based on the assumptions one desires to make. • 5. The kinked demand theory (no collusion)- developed by Paul Sweezy of the UC. Illustrate graphically. • It assumes one firm’s price increases will be ignored by its rivals whereas its price decrease will be matched • It seeks to explain the observed existence of price rigidity or inflexibility in oligopoly

  13. 6. Cartel - a group of firms that collude by agreeing to restrict output to increase price and profits ( charging a uniform price). Under a cartel, the price and output decisions for oligopoly is similar to that of monopoly. Example: OPEC 1973-1974 price/barrel of oil = $3.00 1979 price/barrel of oil =$39.00 1985 price/barrel of oil < $20.00 11/30/2006 price/barrel of oil= $62.87 8/2008 price/barrel of oil= $147.00 4/13/11 price/barrel of oil= $106.57 4/11/12 price/barrel of oil = $101.92

  14. There are, however, a number of problems associated with a cartel. • .Differences in the cost of production will not allow firms to charge a uniform price. • .There is always a problem of cheating by cartel members • .The larger the number of cartel members, the more difficult it is to keep a cartel together • .A cartel is illegal in the U.S.

  15. 7. Price leadership by a dominant firm or low cost (efficient) firm (tacit collusion) • A price leader is a firm whose prices are followed by the rest of the industry • USX sets the price of various steel products • GM sets price of various autos

  16. Cost - plus- pricing - a pricing policy whereby a firm computes its average cost of producing a product and then sets the price by adding the per unit cost plus some percentage above this cost. This pricing method is used by the auto industry widely because of its practical application. Price = AC at maximum production capacity + markup (return on investment) Price of 2012 Saturn car= $ 10,000.00 + 2500 (25% of cost) = $12,500.00

  17. Game theory is the study of how firms behave in strategic situations in which they take into account the possible responses by others. A simple example of game theory is the prisoners’ dilemma. In its original version, a police interrogates two accused criminals separately to a confession. Even though they gain collectively when they refuse to confess, they eventually will confess because if either one caves in and confesses and the other doesn’t, he/she would be worse off. His or her sentence is reduced by confessing regardless of the strategy chosen by opponent.

  18. Game Theory as price and output solution • Game theory has 3 Elements • Players (firms) • Strategies (Dominant strategy and Nash Equilibrium) • Pay-off (Profits or losses) matrix

  19. Strategies A dominant strategy- a strategy that is clearly superior no matter which alternative is chosen by the other person. Nash Equilibrium-a situation in which each player chooses his/her best strategy given the strategy chosen by the other player.

  20. An Example of Duopoly Game Pepsi Don’t AD Advertise Don’t AD C$750M/P$750mC$400m/P$900m Coca-Cola Advertise C$900m/P$400C$500m/P$500m • What is the dominant strategy for Coca-Cola and Pepsi? Advertise • What is the Nash equilibrium strategy for Coca-Cola and Pepsi? Advertise • Why do both end up in cell 4 rather than cell 1 for the Nash Equilibrium? This will help either company to minimize the worst outcome if either one tries to cheat by not advertising when the other does- This strategy is called minimax strategy=> a way of minimizing the worst outcome

More Related