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Chapter 6: Market Structure Brickley, Smith, and Zimmerman, Managerial Economics and Organizational Architecture, 4th ed.
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Market structure objectives Students should be able to Differentiate among the four standard market structures Distinguish between price takers and price searchers
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Market structure What is a market? All firms and individuals willing and able to buy or sell a particular product What is market structure? Defined by attributes of the market environment
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Market structures Perfect competition Monopoly Monopolistic competition Oligopoly
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Perfect competition characteristics Many buyers and sellers Product homogeneity Low cost and accurate information Free entry and exit
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Firm demand curve perfect competition (Figure 6.1)
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Firm supply Short run –Marginal cost curve above average variable cost Long run –Long-run marginal cost curve above long-run average cost
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The firm’s short-run supply curve (Figure 6.2)
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The firm’s long-run supply curve (Figure 6.3)
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Shut-down Analysis If Price (P) > Average Cost (AC) Stay Open (this applies to both short run and long run) What if Price (P) < Average Cost (AC)? Then we need to do more analysis
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Shut-down Analysis If Price (P) < Average Variable Cost (AVC) Shut down immediately
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Shut-down Analysis What if Average Total Cost (ATC)> Price (P) > Average Variable Cost (AVC)? Short run: stay in business Long run: shut down
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Competitive equilibrium (Figure 6.4)
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Barriers to entry Incumbent reactions Specific assets Economies of scale Excess capacity Reputation effects Incumbent advantages Precommitment contracts Licenses and patents Learning-curve effects Pioneering brand advantages
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Monopoly Strong barriers to entry single supplier Profit maximization –faces market demand and sets MR=MC Unexploited gains from trade
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Monopolistic competition Multiple firms produce similar products Firms face downsloping demand curves Profit maximization occurs where MC=MR In the limit, firms compete away economic profits
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Oligopoly A few firms produce most market output Products may or may not be differentiated Effective entry barriers protect firm profitability Firm interdependence requires strategic thinking
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The Nash equilibrium An oligopolist does the best it can, given expectations of rival behavior Behaviors are noncooperative Duopolists considering a low price or a high price must consider rival’s response Nash equilibrium occurs when each firm does the best it can given rival’s actions
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Determining the Nash equilibrium
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The classic prisoners’ dilemma
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The cartel’s dilemma
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