MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 84
About This Presentation
Title:

MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION

Description:

Many firms selling products that are similar but not identical. Oligopoly. Only a few sellers, each offering a similar or identical product to the others. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:170
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 85
Provided by: stephe529
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION


1
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • Chapter 17

2
The Spectrum of Market Structures
3
The Spectrum of Market Structures
4
Types of Imperfectly Competitive Markets
  • Monopolistic Competition
  • ä Many firms selling products that are similar
    but not identical.
  • Oligopoly
  • ä Only a few sellers, each offering a similar
    or identical product to the others.

5
Monopolistic Competition
  • Markets that have some features of competition
    and some features of monopoly.

6
Attributes of Monopolistic Competition
  • Many sellers
  • Product differentiation
  • Free entry and exit

7
Many Sellers
  • There are many firms competing for the same group
    of customers.
  • ä Product examples include books, CDs, movies,
    computer games, restaurants, piano lessons,
    cookies, furniture, etc.

8
Product Differentiation
  • Each firm produces a product that is at least
    slightly different from those of other firms.
  • Rather than being a price taker, each firm faces
    a downward-sloping demand curve.

9
Free Entry or Exit
  • Firms can enter or exit the market without
    restriction.
  • The number of firms in the market adjusts until
    economic profits are zero.

10
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
  • In the short run, the monopolistically
    competitive firm follows a monopolists rule for
    profit maximization.
  • ä Produce the quantity where MR MC.
  • ä Price should be greater than average total
    cost.

11
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
12
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
Price
0
Quantity
13
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
Price
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
14
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
Price
MC
ATC
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
15
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
Price
MC
ATC
Price
Demand
MR
Profit-
0
Quantity
maximizing quantity
16
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
Firm Makes a Profit
Price
MC
ATC
Price
Demand
MR
Profit-
0
Quantity
maximizing quantity
17
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
Firm Makes a Profit
Price
MC
ATC
Price
Average total cost
Demand
MR
Profit-
0
Quantity
maximizing quantity
18
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
Firm Makes a Profit
Price
MC
ATC
Price
Average total cost
Demand
Profit
MR
Profit-
0
Quantity
maximizing quantity
19
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
Price
MC
ATC
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
20
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
MC
Price
ATC
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
21
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
MC
Price
ATC
Price
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
22
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
Firm Makes Losses
MC
Price
ATC
Price
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
23
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
Firm Makes Losses
MC
Price
ATC
Average total cost
Price
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
24
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
Firm Makes Losses
MC
Price
ATC
Losses
Average total cost
Price
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
25
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
  • Short-run economic profits encourage new firms to
    enter the market. This
  • ä Increases the number of products offered.
  • ä Reduces demand faced by incumbent firms.
  • ä Incumbent firms demand curves shift to the
    left.
  • äDemand for the incumbent firms products
    fall, and their profits decline.

26
Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
  • Short-run economic losses encourage firms to exit
    the market. This
  • ä Decreases the number of products offered.
  • ä Increases demand faced by the remaining
    firms.
  • ä Shifts the remaining firms demand curves
    to the right.
  • äIncreases the remaining firms profits.

27
The Long-Run Equilibrium
  • Firms will enter and exit until the firms are
    making exactly zero economic profits.

28
Two Characteristics of Long-Run Equilibrium
  • As in a monopoly, price exceeds marginal cost.
  • ä Profit maximization requires marginal
    revenue to equal marginal cost.
  • ä The downward-sloping demand curve makes
    marginal revenue less than price.

29
Two Characteristics of Long-Run Equilibrium
  • As in a competitive market, price equals average
    total cost.
  • ä Free entry and exit drive economic profit to
    zero.

30
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
31
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
Price
0
Quantity
32
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
Price
MC
ATC
0
Quantity
33
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
Price
MC
ATC
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
34
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
Price
MC
ATC
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
35
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
Price
MC
ATC
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
36
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
Price
MC
ATC
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
37
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
Price
MC
ATC
0
Quantity
38
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
Price
MC
ATC
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
39
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
Price
MC
ATC
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
40
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
Price
MC
ATC
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
41
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
Price
MC
ATC
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
42
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
Price
MC
ATC
Demand
MR
0
Quantity
43
A Monopolistic Competitor in the Long Run
Price
MC
ATC
Demand
MR
0
Long-run Profit-maximizing quantity
Quantity
44
Monopolistic versus Perfect Competition
  • There are two noteworthy differences between
    monopolistic and perfect competitionexcess
    capacity and markup.

45
Excess Capacity
  • There is no excess capacity in perfect
    competition in the long run.

46
Excess Capacity
  • Free entry results in competitive firms producing
    at the point where average total cost is
    minimized, which is the efficient scale.

47
Excess Capacity
  • There is excess capacity in monopolistic
    competition in the long run.

48
Excess Capacity
  • In monopolistic competition, output is less than
    the efficient scale of perfect competition.

49
Excess Capacity
Monopolistically Competitive Firm
Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
Quantity
Quantity
50
Excess Capacity
Monopolistically Competitive Firm
Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
MC
ATC
MR
Demand
Quantity
Quantity
51
Excess Capacity
Monopolistically Competitive Firm
Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
MC
MC
ATC
ATC
P MC
P MR (demand curve)
MR
Demand
Quantity
Quantity
52
Excess Capacity
Monopolistically Competitive Firm
Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
MC
MC
ATC
ATC
P
P MC
P MR (demand curve)
MR
Demand
Quantity
Quantity
53
Excess Capacity
Monopolistically Competitive Firm
Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
MC
MC
ATC
ATC
P
P MC
P MR (demand curve)
MR
Demand
Quantity
Quantity
Quantity produced
Quantity produced
54
Excess Capacity
Monopolistically Competitive Firm
Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
MC
MC
ATC
ATC
P
P MC
P MR (demand curve)
Demand
Quantity
Quantity
Quantity produced
Efficient scale
55
Excess Capacity
Monopolistically Competitive Firm
Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
MC
MC
ATC
ATC
P
P MC
P MR (demand curve)
Excess capacity
Demand
Quantity
Quantity
Quantity produced
Efficient scale
56
Excess Capacity
  • Unlike a competitive firm, a monopolistically
    competitive firm could increase the quantity it
    produces and lower the average total cost of
    production.

57
Markup Over Marginal Cost
  • For a competitive firm, price equals marginal
    cost.
  • For a monopolistically competitive firm, price
    exceeds marginal cost.

58
Markup Over Marginal Cost
  • Because price exceeds marginal cost, an extra
    unit sold at the posted price means more profit
    for the monopolistically competitive firm.

59
Markup Over Marginal Cost
Monopolistically Competitive Firm
Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
ATC
Quantity
Quantity
60
Markup Over Marginal Cost
Monopolistically Competitive Firm
Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
MC
MC
ATC
ATC
P MR (demand curve)
MR
Demand
Quantity
Quantity
61
Markup Over Marginal Cost
Monopolistically Competitive Firm
Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
MC
MC
ATC
ATC
P
P MC
P MR (demand curve)
MR
Demand
Quantity
Quantity
62
Markup Over Marginal Cost
Monopolistically Competitive Firm
Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
MC
MC
ATC
ATC
P
P MC
P MR (demand curve)
MR
Demand
Quantity
Quantity
Quantity produced
Quantity produced
63
Markup Over Marginal Cost
Monopolistically Competitive Firm
Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
MC
MC
ATC
ATC
P
P MC
P MR (demand curve)
Marginal cost
MR
Demand
Quantity
Quantity
Quantity produced
Quantity produced
64
Markup Over Marginal Cost
Monopolistically Competitive Firm
Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
MC
MC
Markup
ATC
ATC
P
P MC
P MR (demand curve)
Marginal cost
MR
Demand
Quantity
Quantity
Quantity produced
Quantity produced
65
Monopolistic Competition and the Welfare of
Society
  • Monopolistic competition does not have all the
    desirable properties of perfect competition.

66
Monopolistic Competition and the Welfare of
Society
  • There is the standard deadweight loss of
    monopolistic competition caused by the markup of
    price over marginal cost.
  • However, regulating the pricing of all firms that
    produce differentiated products would be
    impractical.

67
Monopolistic Competition and the Welfare of
Society
  • The variety of products in the market can be too
    large or too small to be socially efficient. That
    is, there may be too much or too little market
    entry.

68
Monopolistic Competition and the Welfare of
Society
  • Externalities of entry include product-variety
    externalities and business-stealing
    externalities.
  • Because the inefficiencies are subtle, hard to
    measure, and hard to fix, there is no easy way
    public policy can improve the market outcome.

69
Quick Quiz!
  • List the three key attributes of monopolistic
    competition.

70
Quick Quiz!
  • Draw and explain a diagram to show the long-run
    equilibrium in a monopolistically competitive
    market.

71
Advertising and Brand Names
  • Product differentiation leads to advertising and
    brand names.
  • Some critics of advertising and brand naming
    contend that they exploit consumers and reduce
    competition.

72
Advertising and Brand Names
  • Defenders argue that advertising provides
    information and increases competition by offering
    a greater variety of products and prices.

73
Advertising and Brand Names
  • Firms that sell highly differentiated consumer
    goods typically spend between 10 and 20 percent
    of revenue on advertising.

74
Advertising and Brand Names
  • Overall, about 2 percent of total revenue, or
    over 100 billion a year, is spent on advertising.

75
Conclusion
  • Monopolistically competitive markets are
    characterized by many firms each producing a
    differentiated product with freedom of market
    entry and exit.

76
Conclusion
  • In long-run equilibrium, monopolistically
    competitive markets produce with some excess
    capacity and each firm charges a price above
    marginal cost.

77
Conclusion
  • The selling price of a monopolistically
    competitive market results in some deadweight
    losses and resource misallocations that
    regulations cannot practically remedy.

78
Conclusion
  • Product differentiation leads to advertising and
    brand names.

79
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • End of Chapter 17

80
(No Transcript)
81
Figure 17-1a
82
Figure 17-1b
83
P ATC
Figure 17-2
84
(a) Monopolistically Competitive Firm
(b) Perfectly Competitive Firm
Price
Price
MC
MC
Markup
ATC
ATC
P
P MC
P MR (demand curve)
Excess capacity
Marginal cost
MR
Demand
Quantity
Quantity
Quantity produced Efficient scale
Quantity produced
Efficient scale
Figure 17-3
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com