* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Economics of Competition - Jamaica Fair Trading Commission
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
1 Economics of Competition St. John’s, Antigua March 2016 Desroy Reid Competition Analyst, Fair Trading Commission (Jamaica) 2 Outline • • • • • • Objectives Economics and Competition Law Market Structures and Firm Conduct Market Power and Price Elasticity of Demand Market Share and Market Concentration Market Definition 3 Objectives • The Objectives of this presentation are to: 1. Introduce economic theories that underlie competition law 2. Examine how competition authorities define markets, measure market concentration and market power Economics and Competition Law • Definitions – Competition Law • Set of rules of conduct market outcome – Economics • Importance of Economics to Competition Law – Structure-Conduct-Performance 4 Economics and Competition Law • Competition – Ideal for governments looking to maximize its society’s welfare • Benefits of Competition – Total Surplus Maximum – Consumer: Increase in choices & reduction in prices – Producer: Access to cheaper to inputs 5 Market Structures • Other Market Structures include: – Monopoly – Oligopoly – Monopolistic competition 6 7 Market Structures • Entry and Exit • Number of Buyers and Sellers • Information • Product Homogeneity Perfect Competition • Structural Characteristics – Many buyers and sellers – Perfect Information – Homogenous Goods – No barriers to entry or exit • Behavioral Characteristic – Firms are price takers 8 Perfect Competition • Existence of Perfectly Competitive Markets? – Agricultural Markets 9 Monopoly • Structural Characteristic – One Seller – No close substitutes – No entry possible • Behavioural Characteristic – Price makers 10 Monopolies • Barriers to Entry and Monopolies – Economies of scale – Exclusive Access to technology or resource – License 11 12 Monopoly • Natural Monopolies – Only one supplier can exist profitably in the market • High capital cost; – Largest volume, lowest production cost firm – APUA (Water) 13 Oligopoly • Structural Characteristics: – Few firms – High Barriers to entry – Differentiated/Undifferentiated Products • Behavioural Characteristic – Interdependence of Firms • Strategic Interaction 14 Monopolistic Competition • Structural Characteristics – Many Firms – Differentiated Products – Low Barriers to Entry and Exit • Behavioural Characteristics – Price Maker Summary 15 Market Structures Monopoly C H A R A C T E R I S T I C S Number of One Firms Freedom of Restricted/ Entry and Exit Blocked Few Monopolistic Perfect Competition Competition Few or Many Many Restricted Unrestricted Unrestricted Information Not Perfect Not Perfect Not Perfect Perfect Product Homogeneity Example Differentiated Differentiated / Differentiated Undifferentiated Undifferentiated Computers, Cars, Bottled Water, Agricultural Milk, detergents Shoes, Clothing Products Electricity, Water Price Maker or Maker Price Taker Oligopoly Maker Maker Taker Market Power and Price Elasticity of Demand • Market Power – Definition • Price above competitive price • Price Elasticity of Demand – Definition • sensitivity of demand to a price change 16 Market Power and Price Elasticity of Demand 17 • Measuring Market Power – Lerner Index • Relates market power and price elasticity of demand • Formula: P = market price; MC = marginal cost; E = price elasticity of demand. Market Power and Price Elasticity of Demand • In summary – Lerner Index and Price Elasticity of Demand – Competition Authorities’ Market Power Interest • Abuse of market power – Price Manipulation 18 Market Share and Market Concentration • Measuring market share – Sales • Market Concentration – Definition • Small number of firms = Large % of Market • Proximity of competition to market structures – Max. monopoly; Min. perfect competition 19 20 Market Concentration • Method 1: – Herfindahl Hirschman Index (HHI) • Example: In a market consisting of five firms with shares of 40%, 25%, 20%, 10% and 5% the HHI would be equal to: (402 + 252 + 202 + 102 + 52 = 2750) 21 Market Concentration • Method 2: – Concentration Ratio • Total Output produced by firms • Using the HHI example information calculate the four firm concentration ratio: 40% + 25% + 20% + 10% = 95% • Four-Firm concentration ratio – 40% competitive 22 Market Definition • Identify and define the boundaries of competition between firms – Who is competing with whom – Market Power 23 Market Definition • Are Pepsi, Coca-Cola and Water in the same market? • Too Narrow (overstate) or Too Broad (understate) 24 Market Definition Firm Large Market Dupont (1956) Packaging Material Philadelphia National Bank U.S.A (1963) Xerox (1975) Market Smaller Market Market Share Share 20% Cellophane >75% 4% Copy Machines 65% Philadelphia 36% Plain Paper >90% Copy Machines Hypothetical Monopolist Test 25 • Aka Small but Significant Non-transitory Increase in Price (SSNIP) • HMT/SSNIP Test: – Logic: Is a “market” worth monopolizing? • Start with smallest possible market and ask if a 5% price increase is profitable • If yes, then the market is defined as the substitutes outside the “market” must be weak • If not, then firm does not have sufficient market power to profitably raise price. 26 Hypothetical Monopolist Test • So, next closest substitute is added to the relevant market and test repeated. • Process continues until the point is reached where a hypothetical monopolist could profitably impose a 5% price increase. • Thus the group worth monopolizing pulls in all of the relevant substitutes • Market then define 27 SSNIP Example • Are Coca-Cola, Pepsi, and Bottled Water in the same market? • • • • • Step 1: Smallest Possible Market – Coca Cola Step 2: Is a 5% increase in PRICE profitable If yes, Market defined. If no, Move on to step 3 Step 3: Include substitute (Pepsi) and go back to Step 2 28 Summary Table 2. Summary of Presentation Market Structure Market Market Power Market Share Concentration Perfect Competition None Minute Low concentration Monopoly Significant All Fully concentrated Oligopoly Some Some Highly Concentrated 29 Hypothetical Exercise • SunSea is a small country in the Caribbean with a population of 10 people. On the island only three beverages are consumed: K-Kola, Phlepsi and bottled water. • K-Kola and Phlepsi are sold for $100 while bottled water is sold for $70. Things have been this way for some time. The recession has however seen an increase in the cost of K-Kola and its suppliers now have to pay $80 for each unit of K-Kola. 30 Hypothetical Exercise • Last month Mr. Badum, the chief executive officer of Koca Planet (the sole distributor of K-Kola in SunSea), noted that his companies accounts shows that that five SunSeanians drank K-Kola on average per week. Based on his calculations, his weekly revenue is $500 (5 people who drank K-Kola X $100 price of K-Kola). With the increase in the cost of K-Kola he now spends a total of $400 (5 bottles X $80 unit cost) to supply the five K-Kolas demanded weekly, which gives him a weekly profit of $100 ($500-$400). • Mr. Badum is contemplating increasing the price of K-Kola by 10%. He seeks your advice in determining if that 10% increase is profitable. 31 Hypothetical Exercise • All members of your group are citizens of SunSea and drink K-Kola. • Conduct a survey among your group to determine if this increase is profitable by asking each member of the group – what they would do if the price of K-Kola were to increase by 10%? Would they switch to phlepsi or bottled water (given these are the only substitutes) or would they continue buying K-Kola? • Based on your calculations and the responses from your group members, what is the market for K-Kola? • If Phlepsi had 3 customers and bottled water had 2 customers, what would be the market share of all three market participants? Calculate the Herfindahl Hirschman Index. 32 END