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Market Structures Chapter Six
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Highly Competitive Markets Consumers benefit greatly from highly competitive markets Two types: Perfect Competition Perfect Competition Monopolistic Competition Monopolistic Competition
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Perfect Competition Definition: Buyers (consumers) and sellers (producers) compete directly and fully under the laws of supply and demand. No one seller controls supply, demand, or prices Also called pure competition
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Four Conditions of Perfect Competition 1.Many buyers and sellers 2.Identical Products 3.Informed Buyers 4.Easy Market Entry and Exit No market is perfectly competitive
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Example: Agriculture Market in the United States Meeting the four conditions… 1. Independent buyers and sellers—farmers 2. Similar products—corn grown by a farmer in GA is similar to corn grown in TN 3. Informed buyers—labels on produce 4. Easy Exit/Entry—suppliers can easily change specialization in the market
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Monopolistic Competition Definition: market in which many producers offer a similar, but not identical, good or service Similar to perfect competition in that it is under supply and demand Much more common than perfect competition
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Product Differentiation in Monopolistic Competition Sellers try to point out differences between their products and those of their competitors Product differentiation used to set products apart
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Non-price Competition in Monopolistic Competition Competition through advertising, not price Example: Blue jean market “No-name” vs. designer “No-name” vs. designer
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Profits By setting a product apart from its competitor, the seller can raise the price above the competitive price Done by: advertising, brand-name loyalty Ex. Godiva Chocolate
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Imperfectly Competitive Markets Dominated by 1-4 sellers Two types – Oligopoly Oligopoly Monopoly Monopoly
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Oligopolies (Oligopoly) Most common noncompetitive market in the US Definition: market in which a few large sellers control most of the production of a good or service
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3 Conditions of an Oligopoly 1.Few Large Sellers Largest 3 or 4 sellers control 70% or more of the market 2.Identical or Similar Products 3.Difficult Market Entry
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Oligopolies at Work Non-price competition: sellers attempt to differentiate their products through advertising and name-brand loyalty Interdependent Pricing: Responding to the prices of competitors Pricing War: Sellers aggressively undercut each other’s prices in an attempt to gain the market share
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Oligopolies at Work, Continued Cartels: Companies openly organizing a system of price setting and market sharing International carters: diamonds, oil International carters: diamonds, oil Often unstable and short-lived Often unstable and short-lived Collusion: Sellers secretly agree to set production levels or prices Illegal!! Illegal!!
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Monopolies Conditions opposite from perfect competition Conditions: 1. Single Seller 2. No close substitutes 3. Difficult Market Entry
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4 Types of Monopolies 1.Natural Monopolies Definition: Single seller that produces a good/service most efficiently Example: public and private utilities 2.Geographic Monopolies Limited by geographic location Example: general store in a rural area 3.Technological Monopolies Develop when a producer develops a new technology Example: trident submarines Patents and copyrights 4.Government Monopolies Any market in which the government is the sole seller Example: water, sewage, roads, bridges, canals
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Monopolies at Work 3 forces limit seller’s control of prices 1. Consumer demand 2. Potential Competition 3. Government Regulation
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