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Chapter 6 Market Structures. –Perfect Competition Characteristics –Many small firms –Easy Entry and exit –Identical product –No nonprice competition –Price.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 6 Market Structures. –Perfect Competition Characteristics –Many small firms –Easy Entry and exit –Identical product –No nonprice competition –Price."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 6 Market Structures

2 –Perfect Competition Characteristics –Many small firms –Easy Entry and exit –Identical product –No nonprice competition –Price taker: P = MR Profit Maximization –MR = MC –Profits invite entry, Firms enter, Supply increases, Price falls –Breakeven in the long run –Losses cause firms to exit, Supply increases Price rises

3 Monopoly –Characteristics 1 Seller (Firm and industry are the same) No close substitutes Price Maker Non-price competition (goodwill advertising) Barriers to Entry –Economies of scale (natural monopoly) –Legal Barriers »Government sanctioned - MLB »Patents and Licenses »Inventions »Innovations »Copyright – literary, music or artistic work –Control of a essential (strategic) resource

4 –Potential to always make a profit –MR = MC –Price Discrimination – charging different customers different prices for the same product Conditions Must have monopoly power Market segmentation - Can divide the market »Location »Time of Use »Age »Gender »Income »Type of customer Market Sealing - Buyers can't resell Inelastic demand Turns loss into a profit

5 –Monopolistic Competition Characteristics –Many firms –Easy entry and exit –Similar products »Product differentiation »Physical »Quality »Services and conditions »Location »Advertising, Image, Brand name and packaging »Developing and improving the product –Product Variety

6 –Non-price competition (local radio, newspaper, and TV) »Advertising (local radio, newspaper, and TV) »Types »Informational »Persuasive – increases the demand »Direct Marketing – telephone, post, e-mail »Mass Marketing – TV, newspaper, radio, magazines »Interactive Marketing – internet, sales booth »Consumer follow up »Brand names and Trademarks –Price Searcher –Examples: stores in the mall and shopping centers

7 Model: MR = MC –Profits in the short run, firms enter with a slightly different product –Long run – breakeven –Demand saturation – satisfying the total demand for a product in an area –Explains the turnover rate among firms

8 –Oligopoly Characteristics –Few dominant large firms –Difficult entry and exit »Barriers to entry »Large capital costs »Economies of scale »Large advertising budget »Brand loyalty –Much non-price competition (national TV and Magazines) –Firms are mutually interdependent –Differentiated product »New and improved »New models for cars –Concentration ratio =sales of top 4/sales of the industry

9 Models –Cartels and collusion »Firms agree to set prices and/or market share –Price Leadership - One firm sets the price and others follow –Kinked Demand Curve - firms follow price decrease but not an increase –Game theory – shows interdependence among firms

10 Antitrust Laws –Deal with market power and monopolies –Laws Sherman Act (1890) - Antimonopoly –Contracts in restraint of trade –Price fixing –Monopolies »Collusion Clayton Act (1914) – unfair business practices –Price discrimination –Tying contracts – buy one, must buy the other –Acquisition of stock of competing firms –Interlocking directorates –Exclusive dealing or territories –Predatory pricing – selling below costs to drive out competition »Price Wars

11 Celler-Kefauver Act (1950) –Anti-merger act – merger by stock acquisition –Types of Mergers »Vertical – firm and supplier »Horizontal – competitors »Conglomerate - unrelated

12 –Exemptions Labor Unions Exporting Firms Regulated industries –Public utilities Professional Baseball

13 Technological Advance - New and better goods and ways of producing them –Invention - the discovery of a new product or production process –Innovation Product innovation - new and improved commercial use of products Process innovation - new and improved commercial use of production methods –Diffusion - copying or imitating an innovation

14 Industrial Organization of Sports: Sports Market Outcomes –Market Power in sports – teams have exclusive territory (geographical markets) Multiple Teams –Cities can support more than one team –Parts of cities are different –Price Discrimination This is not, different prices for different seat locations

15 –Why Leagues? Making Play and Profits Goals –Restrict entry and assign territory »One seller per region »Leagues block entry and exit –Teams differentiate product to ensure loyalty »Some teams earn economic profits

16 Single-Entity Cooperation: Making League Play Happen –Scheduling »Each team wants to draw the most fans »Wants to play the most sought after teams –Setting the rules »Each must play under the same rules »Altering rules changes the pattern of winning »Time of the game »More action »Rule interpretation? –Cooperation and Championship »Ultimate fan demand »Playoffs »Extend the season and fan interest »Increases revenues without increasing talent costs »Must determine the proper number of games

17 Joint Venture Cooperation: Economics of League Behavior –Owners control leagues »If leagues don’t make owners better off than without leagues they will leave »Exclusive Territories: Territory definition and protection »Market Power »Expressed the Franchise Agreement »Rights to name, logo and properties »Must have leagues permission to move

18 –Economic Impacts »Quantity restriction »Season length »Exclusive territory: limit the number of teams »League announces expansion long lines form »No substitute »New leagues are discouraged »Monopoly power – high prices and reduced output »Create revenue, competitive and payroll imbalance

19 »Expansion and Relocation »Based on »Financial value »Risk of leaving a city open for a new league »Dominant league always prevails »Will the economy support the team »Result: less sport, fewer locations, higher prices »League-level negotiations with TV, players, unions and host cities

20 »Remedies for imbalances »Gate and National TV Revenue Sharing »home and visiting team split »by agreed percentages »has no effect »Local Revenue Sharing »adds concessions, parking and local TV »works »Player drafts »Reverse order of finish »no effect »Luxury Taxes »Progressive tax above a maximum »works »Salary Caps – Caps on spending »no effect

21 Leagues act as cartels Economic Competition –Game theory »Both leagues spend high and become major »First league has established location and player talent »Rival league has fewer resources

22 Antitrust –MLB is a legal monopoly and is exempt –Curt Flood Act of 1998 MLB players can sue the league Removed MLB exemption –Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 - league wide TV contracts are exempted from Antitrust laws Sports leagues can act as cartels when bargaining with TV networks Blackout laws –Merger facilitation between leagues by Congress

23 Market Structure in Music –Oligopoly Obtained by mergers –Horizontal merger: Sony and EMI –Vertical merger: Sony and Columbia records –Artists differentiate their product –Difficult entry and exit –Few dominate interdependent firms Artists Record companies Distributors –Universal 29.7% –Warner 16.3% –BMG 15.2% –Sony 14.6% –EMI 10.9%

24 –High concentration Ratio: 75.8% –Pricing Price leadership Kinked Demand curve –Technological advance Records 8-track Cassettes CD’s DVD MP3

25 Industrial Organization in Movies –Market Structure: Oligopoly Major forces in film –Patents and copy rights: Intellectual property –Technology »Cable »Home video »Television –Capital: large amounts needed for marketing, production, and distribution –1948 separation of distribution and exhibition –The emergence of large multiplex theater chains in suburban areas »Economies of scale –Growth of independent production and distribution organizations

26 Exhibition leaders: make money on concessions –Regal entertainment Group (United Artists) –Loews Cineplex –AMC Entertainment Distribution leaders –Walt Disney –Sony –Paramount –20th Century Fox –Warner Brothers –Universal –MGM

27 –Antitrust: 1948 case U.S. vs. Paramount Pictures, et al –Price Discrimination Age Time of use

28 Fashion Laws –Laws Textile and Wool Acts: label requirements Trade and Development Act (2000): child labor Unions –UNITE: Garment workers union Piracy: illegal copies of a product –Counterfeit: exact copies –Structure High fashion: oligopoly Others: monopolistic competition


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