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CHAPTER 17 Real-World Competition and Technology It is ridiculous to call this an industry. This is rat eat rat; dog eat dog. I’ll kill ’em, and I’m going to kill ’em before they kill me. You’re talking about the American way of survival of the fittest. — Ray Kroc (founder of McDonald’s) McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter Goals • Discuss the monitoring problem and its implications for economics • Explain how corporate takeovers can limit X-inefficiency • Discuss why competition should be seen as a process, not a state • Explain two actions firms take to break down monopoly and three they take to protect monopoly • Discuss why oligopoly is the best market structure for technological change 17-2 Pretest 1. When firms operate less efficiently than they could technically, they are called: A) Y-inefficient. B) M-firms. C) monopolistic minimizers. D) X-inefficient. Definition of x-inefficiency 2. Managers often react to the threat of a corporate takeover by: A) becoming more efficient. B) becoming more lazy. C) doing nothing. D) reducing the company's debt load. Threat of corporate takeover, because it may mean a loss of job for managers, makes managers more efficient. 3. Which of the following is an example of a legal monopoly? A) A patent. B) A price support. C) A tariff. D) A subsidy. A patent gives the holder the legal right to be the sole supplier. 4. A shoe producer goes to a shoe store, buys a pair of a competitor's shoes, takes them back to his/her plant, and disassembles them to gain information about the shoes. This is called: A) reverse engineering. B) monitoring. C) deconstruction. D) information engineering. Definition of reverse engineering 5. A) B) C) D) Critics of the regulation of natural monopolies contend that: regulated firms may become too efficient. regulated firms may inflate costs. society cannot rely on direct competitive forces. there is no incentive for regulated firms to develop capital-intensive projects. Since regulators set price relative to costs, natural monopolies have an incentive to boost costs. 6. Firms are most likely to focus on establishing market position if: A) the market is perfectly competitive. B) it is a winner-take-all market in the long run. C) there are diseconomies of scale. D) it is a lazy monopolist. In a winner-take-all competition, the winner, once established, achieves a monopoly and can charge significantly higher prices than its cost without facing competition. Competition to establish market position is fierce. 7. The market structure that economists believe to be the most dynamically efficient and promote technological advancement is: A) perfect competition. B) monopolistic competition. C) oligopoly. D) monopoly. Oligopolists have the funds to carry out research and development and feel the pressure from competitors to innovate. 8. The most likely reason the U.S. government offers patent protection on major innovations is that: A) this creates a strong incentive for firms to innovate. B) firms with patents earn higher profits and can pay higher taxes. C) markets operate more efficiently when economic profits are positive. D) the firm holding a patent will become a monopoly, which is a market structure associated with greater efficiency than any of the others. The promise of patent protection encourages innovation because firms need not fear that the profits resulting from an innovation will be competed away 9. A network externality occurs when: A) greater use of a product increases the benefit of that product to everyone. B) greater use of a product reduces the benefit of that product to everyone. C) the effect of a decision on a third party is taken into account by the decision-maker. D) there are no effects of a decision on any third parties. Definition of a network externality. 10. Technological lock-in occurs when: A) more efficient technologies replace less efficient ones. B) less efficient technologies replace more efficient ones. C) prior use of a technology makes the adoption of subsequent technologies difficult. D) prior use of a technology makes the rewards for subsequent innovations greater. For example, the standard QWERTY keyboard. Short-Run vs. Long-Run Profit • Firms care about both short-run and long-run profit • Firms may not take full advantage of a potential monopolistic situation in the short run to strengthen their position in the long run • Any expenditures on building a brand and a good reputation can reduce short-run profits but increase long-run profits 17-6 Managers’ Incentives and the Need for Monitoring • Managers have an incentive to keep costs down, but their salaries are included in costs • This creates a monitoring problem which is the need to oversee employees to ensure that their actions are in the best interest of the firm • Employees’ incentives differ from the owner’s incentives • To address this problem, firms sometimes give managers incentive-compatible contracts in which the incentives of each of the two parties to the contract are made to correspond as closely as possible 17-7 CEO Compensation Company CEO Compensation in 2007 ($) Oracle 556,980,000 Occidental Petroleum 222,640,000 HESS 154,580,000 Ultra Petroleum 116,930,000 EOG Resources 90,470,000 WR Berkley 87,980,000 Burlington Santa Fe 68,620,000 Alleghery Energy 67,260,000 Monsanto 64,600,000 Deere & Co 61,300,000 Self-interested managers will maximize firm profit only if the structure of the firm requires them to do so 17-8 What Do Real-World Firms Maximize? • Firms have complicated goals that reflect the organizational structure and incentives built into the system • Although profit is one goal of a firm, often firms focus on other intermediate goals such as cost and sales • Some firms do not push for cost efficiency and become lazy monopolists • Lazy monopolists are firms that do not push for efficiency, but merely enjoy the position they are already in 17-9 The Lazy Monopolist and X-Inefficiency • Lazy monopolists are not profit maximizers • They perform as efficiently as is consistent with keeping their jobs • The result is called X–inefficiency where firms operate far less efficiently than they technically could • Such firms have monopoly positions, but they don’t make large monopoly profits which can result in earning normal profits or even a loss 17-10 How Competition Limits the Lazy Monopolist • New firms or international competition can push lazy monopolies to be more competitive • Corporate takeovers, or the threat of one, can improve efficiency • A corporate takeover is when another firm or group of individuals issues a tender offer (buy the stock) to gain control and install its own managers • Nonprofit organizations may display lazy monopolist tendencies 17-11 True Cost Efficiency and the Lazy Monopolist P MC ATCInefficient CL CLM B ATCEfficient A CM D MR QM An inefficient (lazy) monopolist would have higher costs and earn only B profit An efficient monopolist would have lower costs and earn A+B profit Q 17-12 The Fight between Competitive and Monopolistic Forces • Competition is a process – a fight between the forces of monopolization and the forces of competition • Self-interest-seeking individuals don’t like competition for themselves and may use political and social means to fight competition • It is important to understand how the invisible hand, social forces, and political pressures work in order to understand competition 17-13 How Monopolistic Forces Affect Perfect Competition • Laws, social values, and customs in the United States do not allow perfect competition to work because our government emphasizes other social goals besides efficiency • The Robinson-Patman Act and several state laws prevent firms from charging a price that is too low • The U.S. has laws, regulations, and programs that prevent agricultural markets from working competitively 17-14 Movement Away from Competitive Markets If suppliers of O-L can keep suppliers of L-M out of the market, price increases to PL P S Profit increases by A PL PM A The suppliers kept out of the market lose C in producer surplus B C Consumers lose A+B in consumer surplus D O L M Q Deadweight loss is B+C 17-15 How Competition Forces Affect Monopoly • Competitive forces work to break down monopoly by using political or economic forces • Lobbying to change the law protecting monopoly • Developing a similar product without violating a patent • Reverse engineering is the process of a firm buying other firms products, disassembling them, studying them, and then copying them within the limits of the law 17-16 Competition and Natural Monopolies • Natural monopolies are industries whose average total cost decreases as output increases and because of this they can make large profits • Economies of scale can create a natural monopoly • To prevent abuse of their market power, many natural monopolies are regulated • New technologies can compete with and undermine natural monopolies 17-17 Regulating Natural Monopolies • Regulated natural monopolies have been given the exclusive right to operate in the industry • In return, they are allowed to charge a fair price, which includes all costs plus a normal return on capital investment • Regulation to allow regulated monopolies to earn a normal profit • When firms are allowed to pass on all cost increases, they have little or no incentive to hold down costs and X–inefficiency develops 17-18 Deregulating Natural Monopolies • Many formerly regulated natural monopolies are being deregulated • In the electricity industry, power supply has been deregulated, but because of the existence of economies of scale, the power line industry has remained a regulated monopoly • Only portions of industries that are likely to be competitive are being deregulated 17-19 How Firms Protect Their Monopolies Monopolies spend money to maintain their monopoly by: • Advertising • Lobbying • Producing goods that are difficult to copy • Not taking advantage of their monopoly position and charging a lower price • Firms will buy monopoly power until the marginal cost of maintaining the monopoly equals the marginal benefit 17-20 Establishing Market Position • It is argued that modern competition is a winner–take–all competition • In winner–take–all markets, the initial competition is on establishing market position • The winner who achieves a monopoly can charge significantly higher prices without facing any competition 17-21 Technology, Efficiency, and Market Structure • Technological development is the discovery of new or improved products or methods of production • Because the global market is significantly larger than a domestic one, globalization provides an incentive to develop new technology • Market structures that best promote technological change are dynamically efficient • Dynamic efficiency refers to a market’s ability to promote cost-reducing or product-enhancing technological change 17-22 Market Structure and Technology Perfect competition • There is no incentive to develop new technologies because they earn no profits to fund research • Even if they did innovate, competitors would gain from the new technology without having to pay for it Monopolistic competition • Because of market power, monopolistic competition is more conducive to technological change • Due to ease of entry, they lack long-run profits, so their ability to recoup their investment is limited 17-23 Market Structure and Technology Monopoly • Monopolists have profits but little incentive to innovate since they are protected by barriers to entry Oligopoly • May be the market structure that is most conducive to technological change • If competitors are innovating, it will force them to do so as well • They receive economic profit, oligopolists have the money to carry out research and development 17-24 Network Externalities, Standards, and Technological Lock–In • Network externalities occur when greater use of a product increases the benefit of that product to everyone • Network externalities lead to market standards and affect market structure • Standards are created when a firm’s standard is accepted and dominates the market • First-mover advantage helps explain the high stock prices of start-up technology companies • Technological lock-in is when prior use of a technology makes the adoption of subsequent technology difficult 17-25 Chapter Summary • Profit is an important goal of firms, but actual goals depend on the incentive structure of the firm • The monitoring problem arises because managers’ incentives are not always to maximize the firm’s profit • Incentive-compatible contracts help alleviate the monitoring problem • Monopolists facing no competition can become subject to X-inefficiency – operating less efficiently than is technically possible 17-26 Chapter Summary • X-inefficiency can be limited by the threat of competition or takeovers • Firms will spend money on monopolization until the marginal cost equals the marginal benefit • Firms protect their monopolies by advertising, lobbying, and producing products that are difficult to copy 17-27 Chapter Summary • Firms compete against patents that create monopolies by making slight modifications to existing patents and engaging in reverse engineering • The U.S. is deregulating the portions of natural monopolies where competition is feasible • Oligopoly is the best market structure for technological advance because oligopolists have an incentive to innovate since they can earn economic profits, which can also be used to invest in research and development 17-28