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Market Structures Structure -> Conduct -> Performance Structure Conditions Perfect Competition 1. Many buyers and sellers 2. Homogenous product 3. Freedom of entry and exit 4. Perfect Knowledge Monopolistic Competition 1. Many buyers and sellers 2. Product Differentiation 3. Freedom of Entry and Exit 4. Semi-perfect knowledge Price Price Taker – market determines the price Price Little bit of Control – price takers within brackets Price Competition Non-Price: product differentiation, advertising, product development SNP Methods of Competition Short Run SNP Oligopoly 1. Few suppliers 2. Pure-Homogenous ImpureDifferentiated 3. Barriers to Entry 4. Interdependence of Firms Fair Degree of Control – interdependent Non Price: advertisement, product differentiation, bundling COLLUSION Kinked Demand Curve Game Theory Prisoner’s Dilemma; alternative strategies depending on assumptions about rivals’ behaviour. Maximin/maximax Monopoly 1. Only 1 Supplier 2. Differentiated or Homogenous 3. High Barriers to Entry 4. Imperfect Knowledge Price Maker – but still constrained by the D-curve No Competition SNP – Same as Long Run NP NP Loss Loss Collusion Agree on price Market share – physically divide up the market Marketing Strategies – level of advertising, diff audiences Formal Collusion is known as cartels e.g. OPEC. High barriers to entry are essential to ensure the continuation of OPEC. Tacit Collusion Dominant firm price leadership Barometric firm price leadership Long Run Equilibrium SNP will attract more firms to the industry, so market supply will increase, bringing market price down. This will persist until firms only makes NP Losses will encourage firms to leave the industry, so market supply will fall, bringing the market price up, this will persist until firm only makes NP. Long Run Equilibrium is NP SNP will attract more firms to the industry, so market supply will increase, bringing market price down. This will persist until firms only makes NP Losses will encourage firms to leave the industry, so market supply will fall, bringing the market price up, this will persist until firm only makes NP. Long Run Equilibrium is NP Average Cost Pricing – profit over AC for range of output, flatbottomed AC curve. Price stickiness, kinked demand curve shows why prices do not alter even if costs shift considerably. Level of advertising and range of goods produced act as a barrier to entry. Long run situation is exactly the same as short run situation if the BTEs hold up. 1. Economies of Scale – natural monopoly and permanent way 2. Brand loyalty 3. Network Effect 4. Lower costs for established firms 5. Legal protection – Patents 6. Predatory pricing Long Run Industry Falling Cost Industry – external economies of scale, so LR supply curve slopes downwards Constant cost industry – where there are no external econs or disecons of scale, so LR supply curve is horizontal Evaluation Efficiency Rising cost industry, where there are external diseconomies of scale, so LR supply curve is rising. Allocatively and productively efficient NP – no waste from society’s POV Market is competitive, every firm must be technically efficient Responds readily to changes in consumer demand No need to waste money on advertising (homog. product) Incentive to be innovative for additional profit in the SR BUT No product differentiation No funds for R&D if only NP Internal econs of scale means that PC will not arise. Firms only make NP, no ‘wastage’ Inflationary situation, firms will raise prices and a new kinked Firms have spare capacity, AR demand curve will emerge – slopes downwards so firms will could happen with one firm first always produce below the or many. Technical Optimum. Spare Capac to deal with increase in demand 7. Ownership/control of key factors 8. Advertising and product development – spend excessively on advertising and offer a wide range of products in order to discourage new competitors. Firms do not operate at lowest possible cost, P>MC P>MC so there is allocative inefficiency Not productively inefficient since they operate to the left of the Technical Optimum HOWEVER Higher price is the price to pay for diversity, heterogeneous products mean that markets approximate to PC if consumers are not bothered by diversity and to MonComp when they do – so it’s different not better Dynamic market structure, continually innovate for SNP in SR. Is it like a congregation of “mini monopolies?” Oligopolies enjoy full benefit of internal economies of scale Funds for R&D from SNP, rapid development of products Product development – huge variety HOWEVER Wasteful spending on advertising There is potential for collusion and hence exploitation of consumer surplus; acts like a monopoly Problems with oligopoly are reduced if barriers are low, it becomes a “contestable market” and helps keep prices in check Enjoys full economies of scale Funds for R&D No need for wasteful advertising HOWEVER Allocatively inefficient since P>MC Output is lower and market price is higher than it would have been under PC X-inefficiency (Leibenstein) Costs of acquiring or protecting monopoly position – Directly Unproductive Profitseeking (DUP) Inequality Potential Competition – Contestable Market Legislation against monopoly Examples Appendix: Monopoly Trust busting – good aspects are lost as well as the bad 1. Public ownership (nationalization): government takes over the running of the monopoly, decides output and prices. However- this solution doesn’t have any competition and hence inefficiency can arise 2. Public regulation, separates role of producer and supervisor, allow efficiency of profit motive but prevents exploitation. BUT regulatory capture.