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Brickley, Smith, and Zimmerman,
Managerial Economics and
Organizational Architecture, 4th ed.
Chapter 6: Market Structure
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Market structure
objectives
• Students should be able to
• Differentiate among the four archetypal
market structures
• Distinguish between price takers and
price searchers
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
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
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Market structure
the archetypes
•
•
•
•
Perfect competition
Monopoly
Monopolistic competition
Oligopoly
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Perfect competition
characteristics
•
•
•
•
Many buyers and sellers
Product homogeneity
Low cost and accurate information
Free entry and exit
• Best regarded as a benchmark
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Firm demand curve
perfect competition
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Firm supply
• Short run
– Marginal cost curve above average
variable cost
– P* = SRMC
• Long run
– Long-run marginal cost curve
above long-run average cost
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
The firm’s short-run supply curve
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
The firm’s long-run supply curve
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Competitive equilibrium
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Barriers to entry
Incumbent reactions
Incumbent advantages
•
•
•
•
• Precommitment
contracts
• Licenses and patents
• Learning-curve effects
• Pioneering brand
advantages
Specific assets
Economies of scale
Excess capacity
Reputation effects
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Monopoly
• Strong barriers to entry  single
supplier
• Profit maximization
– faces market demand and sets MR=MC
• Unexploited gains from trade
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Monopolist faces market demand
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
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
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Monopolistic competitor in the
long run
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
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
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
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
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Determining the Nash equilibrium
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
The Cournot model
• Duopolists A and B face industry demand
P=100-Q, Q=QA+QB
• Each firm takes the other’s output as fixed
E.g., PA=(100-QB*)-QA
• Marginal revenue for A is
MRA=(100-QB*)-2QA
• If MC=0, profit is maximized if
QA=50-.5QB, which is reaction function
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Cournot equilibrium
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Comparison of prices and output
among different equilibria
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The classic prisoners’ dilemma
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The cartel’s dilemma
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.