Title: Monopolistic Competition
1Monopolistic Competition Oligopoly
Chapter 12, Fall 2006
2What is Monopolistic Competition?
- Attributes of Monopolistic competition
- Many Sellers
- Product Differentiation
- Easy entry and exit
3Short-Run Operation in Monopolistic Competition
- In SR, a monopolistic competitive firm follows
the monopolists rule for profit-maximization. - MR MC
- Price gt ATC
- Price lt ATC
4Demand and Marginal Revenue for a Firm in a
Monopolistically Competitive Market
5(No Transcript)
6Long-Run Operation in Monopolistic Competition
- If firms are making economic profits (above
normal profits) in the short-run, new firms are
encouraged to enter the market. - Increases the number of products offered
- Reduces demand faced by each firm already in
market - Demand curves shift to the left ? decreasing
profit - Firms will enter and exit until the firms are
making exactly zero economic profits (i.e.,
normal profit)
7What Happens to Profits in the Long Run?
8Advertising and Brand Names
- The firm attempts to establish its product as a
different product from that offered by its
rivals. - Differentiation means that in the consumers
mind, the product is not the same. Product
differentiation leads to advertising and brand
names. - Firms may differentiate products by perceived
quality, reliability, color, style, safety
features, packaging, purchase terms, warranties
and guarantees, location, availability (hours of
operation) or any other features. - Brand names may signal information regarding the
product, reducing consumer risk.
9Advertising and Brand Names (cont.)
- Critics of monopolistic competition contend that
advertising and brand name exploit consumers and
reduce competition - Defenders argue that advertising increases
competition by offering a greater variety of
products and prices
10Advertising, Prices, and Profits
Product differentiation reduces the price
elasticity of demand, which appears as a steeper
demand curve. Successful product differentiation
enables the firm to charge a higher price.
11Benefits of Brand Names
- Provide consumers information about quality when
quality cannot be easily judged in advance of
purchase. - Give firms an incentive to maintain high quality.
12Monopolistic Competition vs. Perfect Competition
- Differences in LR between monopolistic
competition and perfect competition. - Excess Capacity
- Could increase production
- Markup
13Comparing Perfect Competition and Monopolistic
Competition
14Oligopoly(Fall 2006, Chap. 13)
- An Oligopoly is characterized by
- Few sellers
- Standardized or differentiated products
- Difficult to enter industry
- Economies of Scale
- Ownership of a Key Input
- Government-Imposed Barriers (patent)
- Interdependent on other firms in industry
- Best policy is to cooperate and act like a
monopolist by producing a small quantity of
output (Q) and charging a price above marginal
cost (MC).
15Oligopoly and Barriers to Entry
16Interdependence
- The importance of interdependence is that it
leads to strategic behavior. - Strategic behavior is the behavior that occurs
when what is best for A depends upon what B does,
and what is best for B depends upon what A does. - Such behavior has been analyzed using the
mathematical techniques of game theory. - Game theory is the study of how people behave in
strategic situations. Strategic decisions
means that each person (firm) in deciding what
actions to take, must consider how others (firms)
might respond to that action.
17Prisoners Dilemma
- In this game between 2 criminals suspected of
committing a crime, the sentence that each
receives depends both on his or her decision
whether to confess or remain silent and on the
decision made by the other. - The dominant strategy is the strategy that is
best for a player (firm) in a game regardless of
the strategies chosen by the other players
(firms).
18Using Game Theory to Analyze Oligopoly
- A Duopoly Game Price Competition between Two
Firms
- Payoff matrix A table that shows the payoffs that
each firm earns from every combination of
strategies by the firms.
Collusion An agreement among firms to charge the
same price, or to otherwise not compete.
19Cooperation Self-Interest
- Cooperation is difficult to maintain, because
cooperation is not in the best interests of the
individual (firm). - Self-Interest makes it difficult for the
oligopoly to maintain the cooperative outcome
with low production, high prices, and monopoly
profits.
20Collusion Cartels
- Collusion, which leads to secret cooperative
agreements, is illegal in the U.S., although it
is legal and acceptable in many other countries. - A cartel is an organization of independent firms
whose purpose is to control and limit production
and maintain or increase prices and profits. - Firms in oligopolies have a strong incentive to
collude in order to reduce production, raise
prices, and increase profits.