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Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly Chapter 11.

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Presentation on theme: "Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly Chapter 11."— Presentation transcript:

1 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly Chapter 11

2 Monopolistic Competition Large number of sellers –Small market shares –No collusion –Independent action Differentiated Products –Product attributes –Service –Location –Brand names and packaging –Some control over price 11-2

3 Easy entry and exit Need for advertising –Nonprice Competition Which industries? –Degree of concentration –Four-firm concentration ratio –Herfindahl index Monopolistic Competition 11-3

4 Firm’s demand curve –Highly elastic, differentiating it from monopoly and pure competition Short run profit or loss –Produce where MR=MC Monopolistic Competition 11-4

5 Short-Run Profits Quantity Price and Costs MR = MC MC MR D1D1 ATC Economic Profit Q1Q1 A1A1 P1P1 0 Monopolistic Competition 11-5

6 Short-Run Losses Quantity Price and Costs MR = MC MC MR D2D2 ATC Loss Q2Q2 A2A2 P2P2 0 Monopolistic Competition 11-6

7 Long run normal profit –Entry and exit –As firms enter, the demand faced by individual firm falls until it is tangential to ATC Monopolistic Competition 11-7

8 Long-Run Equilibrium Quantity Price and Costs MR = MC MC MR D3D3 ATC Q3Q3 P 3 = A 3 0 Monopolistic Competition 11-8

9 Quantity Price and Costs MR = MC MC MR D3D3 ATC Q3Q3 0 P 3 = A 3 P=MC=Min ATC for pure competition (recall) P4P4 Q4Q4 Price is Lower Excess Capacity at Minimum ATC Monopolistic competition is not efficient Monopolistic Competition 11-9

10 Inefficient –Neither allocative nor productive efficiency achieved Product variety –Can maintain profits by maintaining product differentiation Monopolistic Competition 11-10

11 Oligopoly A few large producers Homogeneous or differentiated products Control over price –Mutual interdependence –Strategic behavior Entry barriers Mergers 11-11

12 Oligopoly Four-firm concentration ratio –Needs to be more than 40% Shortcomings: 1.Localized markets 2.Inter-industry competition –substitutes 11-12

13 Oligopoly 3. World trade –Import Competition 4. Dominant firms –A firm may have close to 100% share and operate as a monopoly while others operate as oligopoly Solution: Herfindahl index 11-13

14 Game Theory RareAir’s Price Strategy Uptown’s Price Strategy AB CD $12 $15 $6 $8 $6 $15 High Low 2 competitors 2 price strategies Each strategy has a payoff matrix Greatest combined profit Independent actions stimulate a response 11-14

15 Game Theory RareAir’s Price Strategy Uptown’s Price Strategy AB CD $12 $15 $6 $8 $6 $15 High Low Independently lowered prices in expectation of greater profit leads to the worst combined outcome Eventually low outcomes make firms return to higher prices 11-15

16 Game Theory Mutual interdependence –Pricing policy Collusion –Enhances profit by agreeing to a high price policy Incentive to cheat Prisoner’s dilemma –Fearful that other will cheat, both firms will probably cheat 11-16

17 Three Oligopoly Models 1. Kinked-demand curve 2. Collusive pricing 3. Price leadership Why three models? –Diversity of oligopolies –Complications of interdependence 11-17

18 Kinked-Demand Curve Noncollusive oligopoly What does D look like? –Will depend on how rivals react to a price change 1.Match price changes –Steep D and MR because if P cut, sales will increase modestly as other firms also cut P 11-18

19 Kinked-Demand Curve 2. Ignore price changes –Flatter D and MR –P cut will ensure significant gain in sales –As P rises, all sales will not be lost due to product differentiation 11-19

20 Price Quantity 0 MR 2 D2D2 D1D1 MR 1 g Competitor and rivals strategize versus each other Kinked-Demand Curve

21 Combined strategy Which assumption should the firm make about its rivals? –Depends on direction of price change Match price decline below P 0 as they act to prevent price cutter from taking their customers Ignore price increases above P 0

22 Price Price and Costs Quantity 0 0 P0P0 MR 2 D2D2 D1D1 MR 1 e f g Rivals Ignore Price Increase Rivals Match Price Decrease Q0Q0 Competitor and rivals strategize versus each other Consumers effectively have 2 partial demand curves and each part has its own marginal revenue part MR 2 D2D2 D1D1 MR 1 Q0Q0 MC 1 MC 2 P0P0 Resulting in a kinked-demand curve to the consumer – price and output are optimized at the kink e f g Kinked-Demand Curve 11-22

23 Price inflexibility On the D side, any change in P will be for the worse If it raises P, many customers will desert it If it lowers P, sales will only improve modestly as rivals also lower P On the cost side, all positions of MC between MC 1 and MC 2 will result in same decision

24 Criticisms of the model: 1.Explains inflexibility not how does price get to P 0 2.Prices are not that rigid when macroeconomy is unstable resulting in price wars Kinked-Demand Curve 11-24

25 Price and Costs Quantity Cartels and Other Collusion Price and output –Joint profit maximization D MR=MC ATC MC MR P0P0 A0A0 Q0Q0 Economic Profit Effectively Sharing The Monopoly Profit 11-25

26 Cartels and Other Collusion Covert collusion –Tacit understandings Obstacles to collusion –Demand and cost differences –Number of firms –Cheating –Recession –Potential entry –Legal obstacles: antitrust law 11-26

27 Price Leadership Model One dominant firm sets price Infrequent price changes –Risk that rivals might not follow Communications Limit pricing –May lower prices to discourage entry Breakdowns in price leadership: –Price wars 11-27

28 Oligopoly and Efficiency Not productively efficient Not allocatively efficient Tendency to share the monopoly profit Qualifications –Increased foreign competition –Limit pricing –Technological advance 11-28


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