Oligopoly.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
All Rights ReservedMicroeconomics © Oxford University Press Malaysia, – 1.
Advertisements

OLIGOPOLY Chapter 16 1.
16 Oligopoly.
Oligopoly and Game Theory ETP Economics 101. Imperfect Competition  Imperfect competition refers to those market structures that fall between perfect.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western CHAPTER 16 OLIGOPOLY.
Part 8 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
15 chapter: >> Oligopoly Krugman/Wells Economics
AP Economics Mr. Bernstein Module 65: Game Theory December 10, 2014.
Game Theory. Games Oligopolist Play ▫Each oligopolist realizes both that its profit depends on what its competitor does and that its competitor’s profit.
Economic Analysis for Business Session XIII: Oligopoly Instructor Sandeep Basnyat
OLIGOPOLY AND DUOPOLY Asst. Prof. Dr. Serdar AYAN
Strategic Decisions Making in Oligopoly Markets
Oligopoly Fun and games. Oligopoly An oligopolist is one of a small number of producers in an industry. The industry is an oligopoly.  All oligopolists.
Oligopoly. Definition Industry with only a few sellers Industry with only a few sellers A firm in this industry is called an oligopolistic A firm in this.
Copyright©2004 South-Western 16 Oligopoly. Copyright © 2004 South-Western BETWEEN MONOPOLY AND PERFECT COMPETITION Imperfect competition refers to those.
Objectives © Pearson Education, 2005 Oligopoly LUBS1940: Topic 7.
© 2007 Thomson South-Western. BETWEEN MONOPOLY AND PERFECT COMPETITION Imperfect competition refers to those market structures that fall between perfect.
Chapter 10 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly.
CHAPTER 15 Oligopoly. 2 What you will learn in this chapter: The meaning of oligopoly, and why it occurs Why oligopolists have an incentive to act in.
UNIT 4.3: IMPERFECT COMPETITION Oligopoly(Oli.). Identical Products No advantage D=MR=AR=P Both efficiencies Price-Taker 1000s Perfect Competition Monopolistic.
Chapter 16 Oligopoly. Objectives 1. Recognize market structures that are between competition and monopoly 2. Know the equilibrium characteristics of oligopoly.
What market structures lie between perfect competition and monopoly, and what are their characteristics? What outcomes are possible under oligopoly? Why.
Economics: Principles and Applications, 2e by Robert E. Hall & Marc Lieberman.
OLIGOPOLY Chapter 16. The Spectrum of Market Structures.
1 Monopolistic Competition & Oligopoly ©2005 South-Western College Publishing Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary.
Monopoly and Oligopoly
Chapter Eleven Product Differentiation, Monopolistic Competition, and Oligopoly.
Perfect competition, with an infinite number of firms, and monopoly, with a single firm, are polar opposites. Monopolistic competition and oligopoly.
A monopolistically competitive market is characterized by three attributes: many firms, differentiated products, and free entry. The equilibrium in a monopolistically.
Monopolistic Competition and Oligopolies. Monopolistic Competition Companies offer differentiated products yet face competition Companies face downward.
© 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman Wells Olney Prepared by: Fernando & Yvonn Quijano.
CHAPTER 15 Oligopoly PowerPoint® Slides by Can Erbil © 2004 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved.
Oligopolies & Game Theory
© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning, all rights reserved C H A P T E R Oligopoly.
Chapter 14 Oligopoly.
Monopolistic competition and Oligopoly
CHAPTER 15 Oligopoly PowerPoint® Slides by Can Erbil © 2004 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved.
Ch. 16 Oligopoly. Oligopoly Only a few sellers offer similar or identical products Actions of any seller can have large impact on profits of other sellers.
Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. Oligopoly IRL In some markets there are only two firms. Computer chips are an example. The chips that drive most PCs are made by.
PowerPoint Slides by Robert F. BrookerHarcourt, Inc. items and derived items copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. Managerial Economics in a Global Economy.
ECONOMICS Paul Krugman | Robin Wells with Margaret Ray and David Anderson SECOND EDITION in MODULES.
Micro Review Day 3 and 4. Perfect Competition 14 A Perfectly Competitive Market For a market to be perfectly competitive, six conditions must be met:
Copyright©2004 South-Western 17 Oligopoly. Copyright © 2004 South-Western BETWEEN MONOPOLY AND PERFECT COMPETITION Imperfect competition includes industries.
Copyright©2004 South-Western 16 Oligopoly. Copyright © 2004 South-Western BETWEEN MONOPOLY AND PERFECT COMPETITION Imperfect competition refers to those.
Oligopoly. Some Oligopolistic Industries Economics in Action - To get a better picture of market structure, economists often use the “four- firm concentration.
Microeconomics 1000 Lecture 13 Oligopoly.
Module 31 Oligopoly.
Monopolistic Competition And Oligopoly
Module 32 Game Theory.
CASE FAIR OSTER ECONOMICS P R I N C I P L E S O F
Managerial Economics in a Global Economy
Oligopolies & Game Theory
CHAPTER 15 Oligopoly.
Ch. 16 Oligopoly.
Market Failure: Oligopolies
CH14:OLIGOPOLY DUOPOLY AND GAME THEORY Asst. Prof. Dr. Serdar AYAN
Oligopolies Chapter 13-.
MODULE 28 (64) Introduction to Oligopoly
Economics September Lecture 16 Chapter 15 Oligopoly
이 장에서는 불완전 경쟁시장에 대해서 학습한다.
Game Theory Module KRUGMAN'S MICROECONOMICS for AP* Micro: Econ:
Oligopolies & Game Theory
16 Oligopoly.
Oligopoly Pricing Chapter 16 completion.
Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
Oligopoly and Game Theory
CHAPTER 15 Oligopoly Principles of Microeconomics (Economics 102)
Presentation transcript:

Oligopoly

The Prevalence of Oligopoly In addition to perfect competition and monopoly, oligopoly and monopolistic competition are also important types of market structure. They are forms of imperfect competition. Oligopoly is a common market structure. It arises from the same forces that lead to monopoly, except in weaker form. It is an industry with only a small number of producers. A producer in such an industry is known as an oligopolist. When no one firm has a monopoly, but producers nonetheless realize that they can affect market prices, an industry is characterized by imperfect competition.

Some Oligopolistic Industries Economics in Action - To get a better picture of market structure, economists often use the “four-firm concentration ratio” which asks what share of industry sales is accounted for by the top four firms.

Understanding Oligopoly Some of the key issues in oligopoly can be understood by looking at the simplest case, a duopoly. With only two firms in the industry, each would realize that by producing more it would drive down the market price. So each firm would, like a monopolist, realize that profits would be higher if it limited its production. So how much will the two firms produce?

Understanding Oligopoly One possibility is that the two companies will engage in collusion— Sellers engage in collusion when they cooperate to raise each others’ profits. The strongest form of collusion is a cartel, an agreement by several producers that increases their combined profits by telling each one how much to produce. They may also engage in non-cooperative behavior, ignoring the effects of their actions on each others’ profits.

Understanding Oligopoly By acting as if they were a single monopolist, oligopolists can maximize their combined profits. So there is an incentive to form a cartel. However, each firm has an incentive to cheat—to produce more than it is supposed to under the cartel agreement. So there are two principal outcomes: successful collusion or behaving non-cooperatively by cheating. It is likely to be easier to achieve informal collusion when firms in an industry face capacity constraints.

Competing in Prices vs. Competing in Quantities Firms may decide to engage in quantity or price competition: The basic insight of the quantity competition (or the Cournot model) is that when firms are restricted in how much they can produce, it is easier for them to avoid excessive competition and to “divvy up” the market, thereby pricing above marginal cost and earning profits. It is easier for them to achieve an outcome that looks like collusion without a formal agreement.

Competing in Prices vs. Competing in Quantities The logic behind the price competition (or the Bertrand model) is that when firms produce perfect substitutes and have sufficient capacity to satisfy demand when price is equal to marginal cost, then each firm will be compelled to engage in competition by undercutting its rival’s price until the price reaches marginal cost—that is, perfect competition.

Game Theory When the decisions of two or more firms significantly affect each others’ profits, they are in a situation of interdependence. The study of behavior in situations of interdependence is known as game theory.

The Prisoners’ Dilemma The reward received by a player in a game, such as the profit earned by an oligopolist, is that player’s payoff. A payoff matrix shows how the payoff to each of the participants in a two player game depends on the actions of both. Such a matrix helps us analyze interdependence.

Two firms, ADM and Ajinomoto, must decide how much to produce Two firms, ADM and Ajinomoto, must decide how much to produce. The profits of the two firms are interdependent: each firm’s profit depends not only on its own decision but also on the other’s decision. Each row represents an action by ADM, each column one by Ajinomoto. A Payoff Matrix Both firms will be better off if they both choose the lower output; but it is in each firm’s individual interest to choose higher output.

The Prisoners’ Dilemma Economists use game theory to study firms’ behavior when there is interdependence between their payoffs. The game can be represented with a payoff matrix. Depending on the payoffs, a player may or may not have a dominant strategy. When each firm has an incentive to cheat, but both are worse off if both cheat, the situation is known as a prisoners’ dilemma.

The Prisoners’ Dilemma The game is based on two premises: (1) Each player has an incentive to choose an action that benefits itself at the other player’s expense. (2) When both players act in this way, both are worse off than if they had chosen different actions.

The Prisoners’ Dilemma Each of two prisoners, held in separate cells, is offered a deal by the police—a light sentence if she confesses and implicates her accomplice but her accomplice does not do the same, a heavy sentence if she does not confess but her accomplice does, and so on. It is in the joint interest of both prisoners not to confess; it is in each one’s individual interest to confess.

The Prisoners’ Dilemma An action is a dominant strategy when it is a player’s best action regardless of the action taken by the other player. Depending on the payoffs, a player may or may not have a dominant strategy. A Nash equilibrium, also known as a non-cooperative equilibrium, is the result when each player in a game chooses the action that maximizes his or her payoff given the actions of other players, ignoring the effects of his or her action on the payoffs received by those other players.

Overcoming the Prisoners’ Dilemma Repeated Interaction and Tacit Collusion Players who don’t take their interdependence into account arrive at a Nash, or non-cooperative, equilibrium. But if a game is played repeatedly, players may engage in strategic behavior, sacrificing short-run profit to influence future behavior. In repeated prisoners’ dilemma games, tit for tat is often a good strategy, leading to successful tacit collusion. When firms limit production and raise prices in a way that raises each others’ profits, even though they have not made any formal agreement, they are engaged in tacit collusion.

How Repeated Interaction Can Support Collusion A strategy of “tit for tat” involves playing cooperatively at first, then following the other player’s move. This rewards good behavior and punishes bad behavior. If the other player cheats, playing “tit for tat” will lead to only a short-term loss in comparison to playing “always cheat.” But if the other player plays “tit for tat,” also playing “tit for tat” leads to a long-term gain. How Repeated Interaction Can Support Collusion So, a firm that expects other firms to play “tit for tat” may well choose to do the same, leading to successful tacit collusion.

Oligopoly in Practice The Legal Framework- Oligopolies operate under legal restrictions in the form of antitrust policy. But many succeed in achieving tacit collusion. Tacit collusion is limited by a number of factors, including large numbers of firms, complex pricing, and conflicts of interest among firms.

Oligopoly in Practice When collusion breaks down, there is a price war. To limit competition, oligopolists often engage in product differentiation. When products are differentiated, it is sometimes possible for an industry to achieve tacit collusion through price leadership. Oligopolists often avoid competing directly on price, engaging in non-price competition through advertising and other means instead.

Some Oligopolistic Industries 2. Which of the following industries is not an oligopoly? A) cigarettes B) breakfast cereals C) light bulbs D) restaurants

Some Oligopolistic Industries 2. Which of the following industries is not an oligopoly? A) cigarettes B) breakfast cereals C) light bulbs D) restaurants

T E S T Y O U R U N D E R S T A N D I N G 4. In an oligopoly: A) there are a few sellers. B) there are some barriers to entry. C) firms recognize their interdependence. D) all of the above are true.

T E S T Y O U R U N D E R S T A N D I N G 4. In an oligopoly: A) there are a few sellers. B) there are some barriers to entry. C) firms recognize their interdependence. D) all of the above are true.

T E S T Y O U R U N D E R S T A N D I N G 5. Game theory is commonly used to explain behavior in oligopolies, because oligopolies are characterized by: A) large profits in the long run. B) either homogenous or heterogeneous products. C) interdependence. D) imperfect competition.

T E S T Y O U R U N D E R S T A N D I N G 5. Game theory is commonly used to explain behavior in oligopolies, because oligopolies are characterized by: A) large profits in the long run. B) either homogenous or heterogeneous products. C) interdependence. D) imperfect competition.