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Chapter 7: Market Structures

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1 Chapter 7: Market Structures
Perfect Competition: a large # of firms produce the same product 4 Conditions Many buyers and sellers Sellers offer identical products Buyers and sellers are well informed Sellers are able to enter and exit the market freely

2 Commodity A product that is the same, no matter who produces it Gas
Milk Notebook Paper

3 A market dominated by a single seller

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5 Natural Monopolies A market that runs most efficiently when one large firm provides all of the output. Ex-public water supplies The environment would be a mess if all kinds of companies drilled for water

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7 Barriers to entry Things that make competition difficult
In the old days the phone company was a local monopoly…wire service was costly and took up space..not enough room for competitors Enter cell phones: wireless, lots of competition

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10 Government Monopolies
Patents-an exclusive right to sell a new good, allows firms to benefit from their research and development Franchises and licenses-only one companies vending machines, or only one contracted vendor per market

11 Price Discrimination Charging different prices to different groups of people Discounted airline fairs, weekends Manufacturers rebate offers Senior citizen discounts Student discounts Free meals for little kids

12 Conditions for Price Discrimination
Market Power Distinct Customer Groups Difficult Resale

13 Monopolistic Competition
A market structure in which many companies sell products that are similar but not identical Four Conditions: Many Firms Few barriers to entry Slight control over price Differentiated Price

14 Nonprice Competition Competition through ways other than lower prices
Physical characteristics Location Service Level Advertising

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17 Oligopoly A market dominated by a few, large, profitable firms
They “seem” to work together to control output and price Difficult to regulate Collusion: an agreement amongst companies to divide the market, set prices Cartel: a formal organization of producers that agree to fix production and prices

18 OPEC OPEC

19 OPEC Oil producing and exporting countries They control OIL

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24 Comparison of Market Structure
Number of Firms Variety of Goods Control Over Prices Barriers to Entry Examples

25 Gov’t Regulation Predatory Pricing: Driving competitors out of business, often selling products below cost Antitrust Laws: prevent monopolies from eliminating competition AT&T was broken up by the Federal Gov’t in 1982, it has slowly been rebuilt through the merger process

26 Regulation Antitrust Laws Breaking up monopolies
Blocking mergers-this doesn’t happen much anymore

27 Deregulation Late 70’s, Early 80,s, Now Airlines Trucking TV Radio
The media in general Prices end up going up in these cases


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