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Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
© 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning
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The Concept of Imperfect Competition
Imperfect competition: market structures between perfect competition and monopoly more than one seller, but too few to create a perfectly competitive market often violate other conditions of perfect competition, such as the requirement of a standardized product or free entry and exit
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Monopolistic Competition
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run Monopolistic Competition in the Long Run Excess Capacity Under Monopolistic Competition Nonprice Competition
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Monopolistic Competition
A monopolistically competitive market has three fundamental characteristics: 1. Many buyers and sellers 2. No significant barriers to entry/exit 3. Differentiated products
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Monopolistic Competition
Because it produces a differentiated product, a monopolistic competitor faces a downward-sloping demand curve when it raises its price a modest amount, quantity demanded will decline but not all the way to zero
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Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
Under monopolistic competition, firms can earn positive or negative economic profit in the short run.
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Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
MR 1 $70 30 Dollars 250 Homes Serviced per Month d A MC ATC
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Monopolistic Competition in the Long Run
But in the long run, free entry and exit will ensure that each firm earns zero economic profit, just as under perfect competition.
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Monopolistic Competition in the Long Run
In long run, a monopolistic competitor will operate with excess capacity - that is, it will produce too little output to achieve minimum cost per unit.
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Monopolistic Competition in the Long Run
Dollars d MC ATC d 2 MR 2 E $40 100 200 Homes Serviced per Month a a a
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Excess Capacity Under Monopolistic Competition
In the long run, a monopolistic competitor will operate with excess capacity; it will produce too little output to achieve minimum cost per unit.
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Non-price Competition
Any action a firm takes to increase the demand for its product, other than cutting its price.
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Oligopoly Oligopoly in the Real World Why Oligopolies Exist
Oligopoly Behavior Cooperative Behavior in Oligopoly The Limits of Oligopoly
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Oligopoly Oligopoly A market structure in which a small number of firms are strategically interdependent.
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Why Oligopolies Exist Economies of scale: natural oligopolies
Reputation as a barrier Strategic barriers Government-created barriers
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Minimum Efficient Scale (MES)
Why Oligopolies Exist Minimum Efficient Scale (MES) The level of output at which economies of scale are exhausted and minimum LRATC is achieved.
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Why Oligopolies Exist
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Oligopoly Behavior Game Theory An approach to modeling the strategic interaction of oligopolists in terms of moves and countermoves
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Oligopoly Behavior Payoff Matrix A table showing the payoffs to each of two players for each pair of strategies they choose
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Oligopoly Behavior Confess Don’t Confess Don’t Rose’s Actions Colin
gets 20 years 30 years 3 years 5 years Rose Colin’s Actions
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Oligopoly Behavior Dominant Strategy A strategy that is best for a firm no matter what strategy its competitor chooses
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An oligopoly market with only two sellers
Oligopoly Behavior Duopoly An oligopoly market with only two sellers
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Oligopoly Behavior Low Price High Price Low Price High Filip’s Gus’s
profit = $25,000 $75,000 Gus’s Actions –$10,000 $50,000
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Oligopoly Behavior Repeated Play A situation in which strategically interdependent sellers compete over many time periods
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Cooperative Behavior in Oligopoly
Explicit Collusion Cooperation involving direct communication between competing firms about setting prices
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Cooperative Behavior in Oligopoly
Cartel A group of firms that selects a common price that maximizes total industry profits
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Cooperative Behavior in Oligopoly
Tacit Collusion Any form of oligopolistic cooperation that does not involve an explicit agreement
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Cooperative Behavior in Oligopoly
Price Leadership A form of tacit collusion in which one firm sets a price that other firms copy
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Cooperative Behavior in Oligopoly
Tit for Tat A game-theoretic strategy of doing to another player this period what he has done to you in the previous period
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When Is Cheating Likely?
Cheating will be likely, and collusion least successful, under the following conditions: Difficulty observing other firms’ prices Unstable market demand Large number of sellers
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