Characteristics of Monopolistic Competition • L a r g e n u m b e r o f s e l le rs : • Small market shares • No collusion • Independent action
• D i f f er e n t i at e d p r o d u c t s : • Firms have some control over prices. • Products may differ in • • • •
attributes services location brand name and packaging
• E as y e n t r y a n d e x i t LO: 9-1
Examples: • furniture • jewelry • leather goods • grocery stores • gas stations • restaurants • clothing stores • medical care
Pricing and Output in Monopolistic Competition • Monopolistically competitive firms engage in non-price competition (such as advertising) in order to differentiate their products. • Because products are differentiated, the demand curve of a monopolistically competitive firm is not perfectly elastic (although it is more elastic than a pure monopolist’s demand). • The price elasticity of a firm’s demand is higher • The larger the number of rival firms • The weaker the product differentiation LO: 9-2
Profits and Losses in Monopolistic Competition Short run •
•
The monopolistically competitive firm uses the MC = MR Rule to maximize profit or minimize loss in the short run. It produces a quantity Q at which MR = MC and charges a price P based on its demand curve. • When P > ATC, the firm earns an economic profit. • When P < ATC, the firm incurs a loss. LO: 9-2
Long run • Because entry and exit are easy, • Economic profits attract new firms, which lowers profits of existing firms, until P=ATC. • Economic losses make firms exit until P=ATC. • As a result, a monopolistic competitor will earn only a normal profit in the long run.
Short-Run Profits in Monopolistic Competition MC s t s P o AT C C d n a e c i r P
Economic Profit
ATC
D in SR MR = MC
MR 0
Q
Quantity LO: 9-2
Long-Run Profits in Monopolistic Competition MC s t s P o AT C P= C dAT C n a e c i r P
Economic Profit
MR = MC
ATC
D in SR D in LR
MR 0
Q
Quantity LO: 9-2
Monopolistic Competition vs. Pure Competition MC s t s o P MC C P PC d n a e c i r P
ATC
Price is Higher D3 MR = MC
Excess Capacity at M i n i m u m A TC 0 LO: 9-2
MR Q MC
Q PC
Quantity M o n o p o l i s t i c c o m p e t i ti o n i s n o t ef f ic i en t
Characteristics of Oligopoly • A f e w l a rg e p r o d u c e r s : • Firms are price markers • Firms engage in strategic behavior • Firms’ profits depend on the actions of other firms
• H o m o g e n e o u s o r d i f f er en t i a te d products:
• If products are differentiated, firms engage in advertising
Oligopoly and Game Theory • Behavior of firms in the oligopoly can be analyzed using g a m e t h e o r y . • Consider an example where two firms (a duopoly) decide whether to set their price high or low. • A payoff matrix can be constructed to show the payoffs (profit) to each firm that result from each combination of strategies. G am e t h e o r y is the study of how people or firms
behave in strategic situations. LO: 9-3
Oligopoly and Game Theory: Example RareAir’s Price Strategy
• 2 competitors • 2 price strategies • Each strategy has a payoff • Greatest combined profit • Independent actions stimulate a response
LO: 9-4
High y g e t a r High t S e c i r P s ’ n w Low o t p U
A
$12
Low
B
$12
C $15
$15 $6
$6
D
$8
$8
Oligopoly and Game Theory: Example • Independently lowered prices in expectation of greater profit leads to the worst combined outcome • Eventually low outcomes make firms return to higher prices • There is a gain from collusion LO: 9-4
RareAir’s Price Strategy High y g e t a r High t S e c i r P s ’ n w Low o t p U
A
$12
Low
B
$12
C $15
$15 $6
$6
D
$8
$8
Kinked-Demand Model of Oligopoly • In the k i n k ed -d e m a n d m o d el , oligopolists face a demand curve based on the assumption that rivals will ignore a price increase and follow a price decrease. • An oligopolist’s rivals will ignore a price increase above the going price but will follow a price decrease below the going price. • The demand curve is kinked at this price and the marginal-revenue curve has a vertical gap. • Price and output are optimized at the kink.
• This model helps explain why prices are generally stable in noncollusive oligopolistic industries. LO: 9-5
Kinked-Demand Model of Oligopoly • Competitors and rivals strategize versus each other • Consumers effectively have 2 partial demand curves and each part has its own marginal revenue part Rivals Ignore Price Increase e c i r P
e
P0 f
D2
Rivals Match g Price Decrease 0
LO: 9-5
Q0
MR1 Quantity
MR2
s t s o CP0 d n a e c i r P
MC1
D2 e
MR2
f
MC2
g
D1
D1 0
Q0 Quantity
MR1
Collusion • Collusion, through price control, may allow oligopolists to reduce uncertainty, increase profits, and possibly block potential entry. • If oligopolistic firms produce an identical product and have identical cost, demand, and marginal-revenue curves, then each firm can maximize profit using the MR = MC Rule. • Firms will choose the price and quantity according to the MR = MC Rule, because it is the most profitable price-output combination. • One form of collusion is the cartel . A Cartel is a formal agreement among producers to set the price and the individual firm’s output levels of a product. One example is OPEC. LO: 9-6
Profit Maximization by a Cartel MC s t s o C d n a e c i r P
E f f ec t i v e l y S h a r in g The Mono po ly Profit
P0
ATC
A0 MR=MC
Economic Profit
D
MR Q0
Quantity LO: 9-6
C ar t e l -t y p e o l i g o p o l y i s i n e ff i c i e n t
Obstacles to Collusion • • • •
Anti-trust law prevents cartels from forming Demand and costs may be different across firms There may be too many firms to coordinate There are strong incentives to cheat • If rivals charge prices lower than P o, then the demand curve of the firm charging P o will shift to the left as its customers turn to its rivals, and its profits will fall. • The firm can retaliate and cut its price, too. However, all firms’ profits would eventually fall.
• Recessions increase excess capacity and strengthen incentives to cheat • High profits attract potential entry. LO: 9-6
Oligopoly and Advertising Oligopolists have sufficient financial resources to engage in product differentiation through product development and advertising. Positive Effects of Advertising • Enhances competition • Reduces consumers’ search time, direct costs, and indirect costs • Facilitates the introduction of new products
LO: 9-7
Negative Effects of Advertising • Alters consumers’ preferences in favor of the advertiser’s product • Brand-loyalty promotes monopoly power
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