Title: Managerial Economics: Applying the Tools Topic 9, Part 2
1Managerial Economics Applying the ToolsTopic
9, Part 2
- Brief review of competition
- Cooperative pricing
- Paul Kerin Sam WylieMBS Term 3, 2004
2Game Plan
- Last topic a stand-alone topic (revealing
pricing signalling)
- Well do that next week
- In our last class, we will
- provide information on the exam and exam tips
- review the whole course
- recap on concepts related to monopoly,
competition, and collusion
- do some in-class practice, emphasising the
necessary steps to answer a question
3Recap competitive pricing
- Firms may compete in prices or in quantities
- Which one will it be?
- Its a function of the competitive conditions in
the market
- ? Its pre-determined whether it will be price or
quantity competition, by the time we compete
- If they can instantaneously meet any market
demand at PMC, then its price competition
(Bertrand) if capacity is fixed below the
quantity where PMC, it is constrained Bertrand,
with PMC P is where demand capacity - If firms must decide how much to produce/stock
before getting to market, then its quantity
competition (Cournot)
- If firms have can decide/change their capacities
before getting to market to produce, then its
competition in capacities (choice of capacity
choice of quantity Cournot)
4Price versus quantity competition
P
Demand QD 1000 - P
-
- Bertrand price competition each charge 200 ?
sell 400
- Cournot quantity competition each sell 267
units, for a total of 534
- units ? charge 466 each
Cournot
Bertrand
MC
Q
5Competition versus collusion
- Bertrand Market price 200, Profits 0 each
- Cournot Market price 466, Profits 71,111
each
- But under either set of competitive conditions,
if they were to collude instead of competing,
they would earn more!
- Collusion pricing higher than you would under
competition.
- Under Bertrand competition, players are colluding
if the price is any higher than 200 (and if no
binding capacity constraint)
- Under Cournot, players are colluding if the
market price is any higher than 466
- Perfect collusion is to behave exactly as if
you were a monopoly
- Players are perfectly colluding if the price is
the monopoly price, 600, each sell 200, and
profits are 80,000 each
6Comparison of outcomes
P
Demand curve
Monopoly or Perfect Collusion
Cournot
Bertrand
MR
MC
Q
-
- Bertrand price competition each charge 200 ?
each sell 400
- Cournot quantity competition each sell 267 units
? charge 466
- Perfect collusion each charge 600, sell 200
each ½ monopoly profits each
7How could collusion be sustained?
- Firms would like to collude
- But what is to prevent us from cheating on our
collusive agreement?
- Cheating in a Bertrand environment
- undercutting your price
- Cheating in a Cournot environment
- selling extra quantity
- Clearly, we do not have a legally binding
contract!
- What is keeping me from cheating?
- If anyone cheats, we will revert to
competition, for the foreseeable future
8Collusion in one-off repeated simultaneous
games a Cournot (quantity competition)
environment
- Mobil and Shell are in a Cournot environment
- Every month they choose the amount they produce
(pump) before they get to market
- Mobil and Shell decide to collude at the monopoly
output level
- produce half the monopoly quantity each lets
call that Low Output
- Suppose there are only two choices of output
High and Low
9Cournot (quantity) environment
Well discuss where the numbers in the table come
from later
10One-off game
Static Nash equilibrium
11Repeated (dynamic) game can they agree to
cooperate?
Dynamic Nash Equilibrium???
12Agreement to Cooperate (Collude)
- Mobil and Shell reach the following agreement
- if both of us chose Low Output last week, each
of us will choose Low Output this week
- but if either player cheats on the agreement,
well never collude again ? Well both choose
High Output
- Question Is this agreement self-enforcing?
(because we sure cant enforce it in court!)
- In other words, is it a Nash equilibrium?
- If the other player is following the agreement,
is it my best response to stick to the agreement?
13Nash equilibrium in repeated games
- To determine whether this is a Nash
equilibrium
- Look at Mobils incentives
- If Mobil expects Shell to stick to the agreement
( not cheat), is Mobils best response to stick
to the agreement?
- To answer this, you need to look at a decision
tree for Mobil the payoff to cheat versus not
cheat when Mobil knows that Shell is not
cheating - Then we look at Shells incentives in the same
way
- If both would choose not cheat, its a Nash
equilibrium
- But if either would prefer to cheat, its not a
Nash equilibrium the agreement wont ever take
place, because its not enforceable
14The present value of profits from cooperating
-
- cooperate forever, given that
Shell cooperates
- Mobil
- cheat today ? no cooperation ever
after
- Note
- Which of these payoffs is bigger depends on the
discount factor, d!
- If the discount factor is small enough (that is,
if the discount rate is high enough) it will
always be worthwhile to cheat
15How to calculate the payoffs
-
- cooperate forever, given that
Shell cooperates.
- Mobil
- cheat today ? no cooperation
ever after
- Mobil cooperates if
- 80 19(1-?) 71 90 - 19?
- ? 0.5263
- Cooperate if the discount factor is above 0.5263
( discount ratebetween months below 90) ?
pretty likely
d 1/(1r)
16Cooperation from Shellboth players must want to
cooperate!
-
- cooperate forever, given that
Mobil cooperates.
- Shell
- cheat today, then never
cooperate
- This is the same condition as for Mobil
- ? Shell will want to cooperate if Mobil wants to
cooperate
- But if there are asymmetries, you have to check
both conditions
17Practice (asymmetric) for what discount factor
can these players agree to cooperate?
18Nash equilibrium in repeated games
- Cooperation is a Nash equilibrium only if both
players find that their best response is to
cooperate
- at ?0.4, Smitas best response to a cooperative
agreement is to cooperate, but Ross would prefer
to cheat
- at ?0.4, Smita doesnt believe that Ross will
cooperate, so Smita doesnt enter a cooperative
agreement
- No agreement
- at ?0.4, they play (Down, Right) every period
- But for any ?0.5, they would play (Up, Left)
every period
- Cooperation is very likely, as ?0.5 means r
19Bertrand (price competition) environment
- Two firms on the internet are selling identical
software
- Every hour they can change their prices
- There is no real limit on the number of
downloads
- unlimited capacity, and quantity is not
pre-determined
- Bertrand competition
- Q 1000 P and MC 200
- If they collude
- They both charge 600, earn 80,000
- If someone cheats on the collusive agreement
- shell charge 599, earn 159,999
- If they are not cooperating (and both know the
other is not cooperating)
- Theyll both charge 200, earn 0
20gives the following payoff matrix
21Determining whether a stable cooperative outcome
exists
- If youre not given a payoff matrix, construct it
yourself
- Determine for what discount rates is collusion
sustainable in this market- equate PV payoffs of
collusion and cheating- solve for ? (and r)
- What is the answer here?
22Cournot (quantity competition) environment
- Mobil and Shell pumping oil
- Q 1000 P and MC 200
for each
- If they are competing (i.e. not colluding) their
best response curves are
- QM 400 ½ QS
- QS 400 ½ QM
- and the intersection of those curves is QM
266.66, QS 266.66, which means profits of
71,111 each.
- If they cooperate, they each produce 200 and the
market clearing price is 600 ? earn 80,000
each
- But what are the payoffs if one player cheats?
- 90,000 to the cheater, and 60,000 to the
other WHY?
23gives the following payoff matrix
The cheater will choose her best response to the
amount produced by the other firm
This is where the numbers on page 9 come from
24Tacit Collusion coordinating on high prices /
low quantities without communicating
- What makes collusion hard to achieve?
- Coordinating without directly communicating
- Ethical issues
- Why does knowing if it exists help?
251.a Collusion is impossible in a finite game
- Result from the centipede game
- If the game ends after a fixed number of periods,
then no collusion can be sustained.
- Ex Generic drugs will flood our market in 2006
- Why? rollback
- In December 2005, no cooperation
- Can we agree to cooperate in November 2005,
saying If you cooperate with me in November,
Ill cooperate with you in December?
- Can we agree to cooperate in October?
-
-
- In the real world, you may cooperate for a
while, but cooperation unravels when the end is
apparent to all
261.b Impatience
- Anything that lowers your ? (raises your r) makes
it harder to cooperate
- Suppose your initial discount factor is ?
- But now your firm is failing, and in every period
there is a 20 chance that youll go bankrupt (it
was approx. zero before)
- Then its your now discount factor is 0.8? ? a
lower discount rateso more likely to cheat
271.c Costs benefits of cheating
- When the benefits to cheating are higher, youre
more likely to cheat
-
- If it takes 3 periods for my competitor to
realise that Im cheating
- because I get high profits for 3 periods
- Need to set up feedback mechanisms so that you
hear about cheating quickly
- Example Kevin Smith Electronics offers to match
the lowest price anywhere (a Meet the
Competition clause), and a 15 rebate if the
price is lower elsewhere - Customers will inform Kevin Smith if his
competitor has lowered the price.
- If you wont necessarily catch me cheating ?
rebates, industry associations that share
information
281.c Costs benefits of cheating (cont)
- Cheat if the benefits to cheating are high
(cont)
- If its a really high demand period, or you have
particularly low costs this period, you might be
tempted to take advantage of that
- If your competitor will forgive you quickly
(shell try to collude again)
- Cheat if the benefits to colluding are low
- If there are many firms in the market, then I am
splitting the monopoly profits
- if its a Bertrand market, then I could undercut
just a little and get the whole market profits
- Im more inclined to cheat than if there are 2 of
us
291c. Co-opetition commitments that
facilitate collusion
- Most Favoured Customer Clause (MFC)
- Manufacturers of antiknock petrol additives (Du
Pont, Ethyl) were brought before the US Federal
Trade Commission for using MFCs
- The seller will pay buyers the best price they
pay to anyone.
- Commits to not offering selective discounts to
attract customers from rivals
- Lowers the gain from cheating on price collusion
- Meet the competition clauses
- With rebates, you find out quickly about
cheating
- Commitment makes the price war more bitter
- Loyalty Programs
- harder to cheat by stealing customers from others
301.d Trigger price strategies
- In some environments, you cant tell who has
cheated
- Several firms
- You dont see how much theyve sold
- Variable demand ? when your price falls, you
dont know if its because demand fell, or
someone cheated
- Results in this environment
- We cant collude at monopoly prices, because
cheating is too tempting ? we have to charge
mid-range prices
- There is a trigger price if the price falls
below this trigger, we all revert to competition
for a few periods (punishment), then we
cooperate again
312. Tacit collusion
- If you cant talk to each other, how do you agree
on a price?
- Focal point something people gravitate to- if
firms are identical, the monopoly price is an
obvious focal point- but usually firms arent
identical (different costs, products, etc) ?
how do you coordinate? - Charge a mid-range price (as in trigger
strategies) ? what price should you charge? How
do you reach agreement?
- One tactic Raise your price, hope the others
follow
- Explains why its easier to coordinate on not
cutting prices, than on raising prices
- (inflation is the customers friend!)
323. Ethics of tacit collusion
- If customers are better off because of collusion,
it may be ethically defensible
- Ex If firms compete Bertrand, one will leave the
market, and the other will charge monopoly
prices
- Customers are better off with two firms
colluding, but only if theyre charging mid-range
(or less) prices (rather than monopoly prices)
- but such cases are rare
334. Why does knowing it exists help?
- Suppose youre entering a market with 3 or 4
producers
- If theyre competing with very similar products,
thats a pretty competitive market
- you would expect that prices wont fall
drastically when you enter the market
- You enter so long as your marginal cost is less
than the going price
- But if theyre colluding
- The price could fall drastically after you enter
if they dont collude with you, or if there are
now too many players to sustain collusion
- The going price is not enough information
- How would you pick up whether theyre colluding?
- Sizable gap between P MC
- Prices dont change when costs or demand change
- Occasional price wars when prices go way down