Title: Pricing with Market Power
1Pricing with Market Power
2Price Discrimination
- First Degree Price Discrimination charging each
consumer their exact willingness to pay - No consumer surplus, very profitable for the
firm, but not very plausible - Second Degree Price Discrimination setting a
menu of options and allowing consumers to
self-select - Good option when you cant determine an
individuals willingness to pay - Third Degree Price Discrimination charging
different prices for different groups - Not as profitable as 1st degree PD but better
than a uniform price
3Third Degree Price Discrimination
- The underlying assumption in 3rd Degree PD is
that different groups have different demands for
the product - Senior citizens have less interest in seeing
movies - Parents can always show little children cartoon
videos at home, so childrens demand for movies
is low - The firm basically treats each group as a
separate market and sets the appropriate price
by maximizing profit
4Mathematically
- Suppose we are looking at a movie theater selling
tickets to (a) senior citizens and (b) all other
adults - The theaters profit can be written
- You simply maximize this profit by choosing ps
and pa
5Other Methods of 3rd Degree PD
- A common way to separate consumers into groups is
to use TIME - High-wage, high-income people typically value
their time more than low-wage, low-income people
(and may have a more inelastic demand for certain
goods) - There are ways to offer the low-wage/low-demand
consumers a lower price based on their lower
value of time
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7More Price Discrimination
- Price-match guarantees offering to meet (or
beat) a lower price from a competitor - The consumer must be AWARE that a lower price
exists - Only a consumer with enough time to search for
all prices will be able to take advantage of this
lower price - Mail-in Rebates requiring the consumer to spend
time to take advantage of the offer - You need to take the 5 or 10 minutes to fill out
the rebate form if youd like to get the 2 cash
back (do you think Donald Trump does this?)
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10Two-Part Pricing
- When it isnt feasible to charge different prices
for different units sold, but demand information
is known, two-part pricing may permit you to
extract all surplus from consumers. - Two-part pricing consists of a fixed fee and a
per unit charge. - Athletic club memberships
- Country club memberships
- Blockbuster REWARDS program
11How Two-Part Pricing Works
1. Set price at marginal cost. 2. Compute
consumer surplus. 3. Charge a fixed-fee equal to
consumer surplus.
Price
10
8
6
Fixed Fee Profits 16
Per Unit Charge
4
MC
2
D
1 2 3 4 5
Quantity
12Block Pricing
- The practice of packaging multiple units of a
product together and selling them as one package. - Examples
- Paper
- Six-packs of drinks
- Different sizes of bags of potato chips
13An Algebraic Example
- Typical consumers demand is P 10 - 2Q
- C(Q) 2Q
- Optimal number of units in a package?
- Optimal package price?
14Optimal Price for the Package 24
Price
Consumers valuation of 4 units .5(8)(4)
(2)(4) 24
10
8
6
4
MC AC
2
D
1 2 3 4 5
Quantity
15Commodity Bundling
- The practice of bundling two or more products
together and charging one price for the bundle - Examples
- Vacation packages
- Computers and software
- Film and developing
- Home theater set (stereo, speakers, DVD player,
etc.)
16An Example that Illustrates Sonys Strategy
- Total market size is 4 million consumers
- Four types of consumers
- 25 will use only Sony DVD players (Type 1)
- 25 will use only Sony stereo equipment (Type 2)
- 25 will use only Sony DVD players and Sony
stereo equipment (Type 3) - 25 have no preference (Type 4)
- Zero costs (for simplicity)
- Maximum price each type of consumer will pay is
as follows
17Reservation Prices for Sony DVD players and
stereos by Type of Consumer
D Sony DVD loyal, S Sony stereo loyal, DS
loyal to both, N neither
18Optimal DVD Player Price?
At a price of 30, all types will buy (profits of
120 Million)
At a price of 40, only first three types will
buy (profits of 120 Million)
Optimal Price is 80, to earn profits of 80 x 2
million 160 Million
19Optimal Price for Stereo?
At a price of 60, only S type buys (profits of
60 Million)
At a price of 40, only S and DS types buy
(80 Million)
At a price of 20, all types buy (profits of 80
Million)
Optimal Price is 30, to earn profits of 30 x 3
million 90 Million
20Total Profits by Pricing Each Item Separately
- The optimal price to charge for Sony DVD players
is 80 - This earns Sony a profit of 160 million
- The optimal price to charge for Sony Stereo
equipment is 30 - This earns Sony a profit of 90 million
- The total profit to Sony is 250 million
21Pricing a Bundle of a DVD player and stereo
equipment together as a Home Theater System
22Consumer Valuations of a Bundle
23Consumer Valuations of a Bundle
Optimal Bundle Price 100 (for profits of 300
million)
24Required Tie-In Sales
- Bundling is sometimes also referred to as a
tie-in sale - The consumer, however, has the option to purchase
either OR both of the goods - In required tie-in sales, the consumer is
required to purchase both goods (you cannot buy
one separately) - Examples
- Mach 3 Turbo razor vs. Schick Quattro
- Sony Playstation 2 vs. Microsoft X-Box
- Polaroid instant camera
- Photocopiers (Xerox)
25Peak-Load Pricing
- Charging a higher price during peak times (i.e.
high demand times) - Examples
- Electricity pricing (the price per kilowatt hour
changes depending on what time of dayso do you
laundry at midnight) - Rental properties (renting a place at the Jersey
shore is pretty cheap in January) - Car Rentals (the price of car rentals is higher
during the summervacation season) - Matinee vs. Regular Admission (movie theaters
charge lower prices during the daylower demand
period)
26Cross-Subsidies
- Prices charged for one product are subsidized by
the sale of another product - May be profitable when there are significant
demand complementarities effects - Examples
- Software (the price of Microsoft Windows
subsidizes Internet Explorer) - Restaurant meals (since drinks are very
profitable, bars and restaurants are able to
offer appetizers and food at lower prices)
27A Restaurant Example
- Many restaurants offer separate lunch and dinner
menus - You may not be able to purchase your favorite
salad or sandwich during dinner hoursWhy? - The answer is peak-load pricing AND cross-subsidy
- Demand is highest during the dinner period, so
the restaurant wants to sell only its high-priced
options - Also, for most restaurants, the dinner rush
subsidizes being open during lunch
28Recap of Pricing Strategies
- First degree price discrimination, block pricing,
and two part pricing permit a firm to extract all
consumer surplus. - Commodity bundling, second-degree and third
degree price discrimination permit a firm to
extract some (but not all) consumer surplus. - Simple uniform pricing is the easiest to
implement, but leave consumers with the most
surplus - Different strategies require different
information.
29What are some price discrimination strategies
that your firm could use???
30Three Advanced Strategies
- The pricing strategies we just looked at focus on
how the firm can manipulate their pricing to best
address consumer demand - There are also some pricing strategies that are
addressed specifically at harming the firms
RIVALS - Limit Pricing to Prevent Entry
- Predatory Pricing to Lessen Competition
- Raising Rivals Costs to Lessen Competition
31Limit Pricing
- Strategy where an incumbent (existing firm)
prices below the monopoly price in order to keep
potential entrants out of the market. - Goal is to lessen competition by eliminating
potential competitors incentives to enter the
market.
32Monopoly Profits
- This monopolist is earning positive economic
profits. - These profits may induce other firms to enter the
market. - Questions
- Can the monopolist prevent entry?
- If so, is it profitable to do so?
33Limit Pricing
- Incumbent produces QL instead of monopoly output
(QM) - Resulting price, PL, is lower than monopoly price
(PM) - Residual demand curve is the market demand (DM)
minus QL . - Entry is not profitable because entrants
residual demand lies below AC - Optimal limit pricing results in a residual
demand such that, if the entrant entered and
produced Q units, its profits would be zero.
34This graph shows
- The monopolist may charge a price below the
monopolists profit-maximizing price - This generates higher sales for the monopolist
and, therefore, leaves very little residual
demand for the entrant - Since the demand is so low, the entrant will
actually not enter - The monopoly survives
35Potential Problems with Limit Pricing
- Net present value the loss of profits today
may, in fact, not be worth the stream of future
profits - In that case, you are better off allowing the
firm to enter - Entrant knows the strategy if the entrant knows
what your firm is doing, they may also realize
that your current price is unprofitable so you
would change the price if they enter
36Limit Pricing
- IF the current loss IS worth the future profits,
then the monopolist will want to do something to
try and signal to the entrant that the monopolist
is COMITTED to this price level (whether they
really are or not)
37Predatory Pricing
- Strategy of pricing below marginal cost to drive
competitors out of business, then raising price
to enjoy the higher profits resulting from
lessened competition. - Goal is to lessen competition by eliminating
existing competitors.
38Potential Problems with Predatory Pricing
- Counter strategies
- Stop production (in the short run)
- Purchase from the predator at the reduced price
and stockpile until predatory pricing is over - Rivals can sue under the Sherman Act
- But it is often difficult for rivals to prove
their case - Upfront losses incurred to drive out rivals may
exceed the present value of future monopoly
profits - Predator must have deeper pockets than prey
39Raising Rivals Costs
- Strategy where a firm increases the marginal or
fixed costs of rivals to distort their incentives - Not always profitable, but may be profitable as
the following example shows
40Cournot Example
- Suppose we have the following Cournot reaction
functions - What if firm 1 does something to impact firm 2s
marginal costs? (i.e. something to increase c2)
41Raising a Rivals Marginal Cost
- Cournot duopoly
- Initial equilibrium at point A
- Firm 1 raises the marginal cost of Firm 2, moving
equilibrium to point B. - Firm 1 gains market share and profits.
42How Can I Raise My Rivals Costs?
- Direct Methods I could interfere with my
rivals production or selling methods - To an extreme, you could damage or destroy your
rivals property/factory - Marketing experiments example
- Interference through Government Regulation
Since many government regulations contain
grandfather clauses, new regulation may help
raise the costs of potential entrants - Production of Complements if you own a
complement to your rivals product, you can use
that as leverage - Comcast vs. DirectTV examples
43Raising Rivals Costs
- Raising wages or other input prices you may be
able to negotiate contracts with suppliers such
that your rivals costs increase - For example, all the U.S. automobile
manufacturers negotiate with a single union. All
manufacturers will eventually have to abide by
the same negotiated wages, hours, etc. - If your firm uses relatively less labor, it might
be a good strategy to negotiate a generous
contract with the union
44Investing in Research and Development (R D)
- What happens when expensive RD can help me lower
my marginal costs?