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Published byRoberta Chandler Modified over 8 years ago
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Relatively few industries conform to strict characteristics of perfect competition & monopoly In most industries: ◦ Competition exists because there are at least two firms in the industry ◦ Competition is imperfect because firms sell products which are not identical to the products of rival firms
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A market structure where a large number of small firms produces non-homogeneous products and where there are no barriers to entry or exit Model developed by Edward Chamberlain, an American economist, in the 1930s, and mirrored by an English economist, Joan Robison, at the same time
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There is a large number of buyers and sellers in the market, each of which is relatively small and acts independently There are no barriers to entry or exit Firms are short run profit maximisers So far, same as perfect competition, but...
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Firms produce differentiated or non- homogeneous goods Firms have some price-making power In reality, most industries have concentration ratios which would suggest they were oligopolistic. Examples of monopolistic competition?
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Video – long run Video Video – difference between short & long run Video
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Hotel trade Coach travel Furniture making In a town: hairdressing & take-away food
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If you are a firm operating in an industry which enjoys monopolistic competition, what are these?
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Think of a firm and explore the ways it competes on a non-price basis
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