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Industrial Organization I

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Example: 2 potential used car buyers (unit demand) Q. 1. 10,000. Q. 8,000. Uniform Price= $9,000 ... profits and consumer is indifferent between buying or not ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Industrial Organization I


1
Industrial Organization I
  • Pricing Strategies with Market Power (Part I)

2
Recap
  • Markets are imperfect
  • IO studies sources of market imperfection as well
    as consequences
  • Market imperfections give firms market power

3
Equilibrium in Imperfect Competition
Price
MC
Producer surplus
P
Demand
Marginal Revenue (MR)
Q
QPC
QIC
  • Last class
  • In imperfect competition, is there ever a case
    when producer surplus is greater if QPC is
    produced instead of QIC?

4
Equilibrium in Imperfect Competition
Price
Producer surplus
MC
P
Demand
Marginal Revenue (MR)
Q
QIC
QPC
  • Answer No.
  • Profit maximizing rule MRMC at QPC MCgtMR so
    it is not optimal

5
Price Discrimination Introduction
  • So far
  • 1 price for all consumers
  • 1 price for all units purchased
  • Larger profits if
  • Different consumers pay different prices (e.g.
    income, age, location, preferences)
  • Price per unit varies with quantity consumed

6
Assumptions
  • Keys
  • No arbitrage possibilities
  • Goods high taxes or transportation costs,
    perishable products
  • Services (Restaurants, transportation,
    entertainment), e.g. 65 and over discounts,
    student id.
  • Market power (lets assume monopoly for now)

7
Assumptions
  • Price discrimination is legal
  • Firm has information on demand preferences
  • Ideally identify the type of consumer
  • Example age or income

8
Reasons for Price Discrimination
  • Consumers are heterogeneous willingness to pay
    varies (price sensitivity)
  • Consumer receives a surplus with uniform pricing
  • Firms with market power can do better

9
Classification
10
Complete Discrimination
  • Each consumer pays a different price
  • More price sensitive consumers pay a lower price
  • Less price sensitive consumers pay a higher
    price
  • Firm requires information about willingness to
    pay
  • Example high prices with bargaining
  • Used cars salesmen

11
Complete Discrimination
  • Example 2 potential used car buyers (unit demand)



Buyer 1
Buyer 2
10,000
Uniform Price 9,000 Profit 9,000
8,000
Consumer Surplus
Q
Q
1
1
12
Complete Discrimination (case 1)
  • Unit demand

Buyer 2
Buyer 1


Price 1 10,000
10,000
Price 2 8,000
8,000
Q
Q
1
1
  • Complete Discrimination Profit 10,000 (buyer
    1) 8,000 (buyer 2) 18,000
  • Consumer surplus 0

13
Complete Discrimination (case 1)

Aggregate Demand
Individual Demand
P
?CS PS

MC
Vi
Q
1
Q
Q
  • Aggregate demand looks like multi-unit
  • Firm sets PiVi (it charges a personalized
    price)

14
Complete Discrimination (case 2)
  • Multiple-unit demand


800
Uniform Price
500
Q
5
15
Complete Discrimination (case 2)
  • Multiple-unit demand
  • How to achieve perfect price discrimination?
  • Option 1 take it or leave it price-quantity
    package
  • Option 2 two-part tariff (non-linear pricing)

16
Take it or leave it offer
  • Option 1 take or leave it price-quantity package
    (r,q)
  • Consumer utility
  • Firms profit maximizing problem

17
Take it or leave it offer
  • Constraint is binding because monopolist
    wants/can extract all surplus
  • Take it or leave it offer becomes

18
Take it or leave it offer
  • Important points
  • Pareto efficient level of output (q) marginal
    willingness to pay equals marginal cost
  • Firm achieves maximum profits and consumer is
    indifferent between buying or not
  • Output is the same as in perfect competition

19
Complete Discrimination (case 2)
  • Option 2 two-part tariff
  • Inverse demand
  • Equlibrium price and quantity
  • Lump-sum payment

20
Complete Discrimination (case 2)
  • Option 2 two-part tariff
  • This non-linear pricing schedule takes the form

21
Direct Discrimination
  • Different groups of consumers pay different
    prices
  • More price sensitive consumers pay a lower price
  • Less price sensitive consumers pay a higher
    price
  • Firm requires information about groups and can
    identify them easily/legally.
  • Examples Haircuts, students, 65,
    coach/business, dry cleaning, Ladies Night

22
Direct Discrimination
p
p1
p2
D1 D2
MC
p2
D2
p1
D1
q1
q1
q2
q2
Q
MR
Q
MR1
MR2
  • Maximization rule MR1 MR2 MC (q1 q2).
  • Intuition If MR1gtMR2, q1 can increase q2
    decrease until MR1MR2
  • More sensitive segment (elastic) pays a lower
    price (group 1)
  • Less sensitive segment (inelastic) pays a higher
    price (group 2)
  • ? is higher than with uniform pricing

23
Direct Discrimination
  • Mathematically
  • Monopolist solves
  • Focs are
  • After some manipulation

24
Direct Discrimination Inter-related Demands
pD
Day
DD (pNpu)
pD
pD
c
DD (pNpD)
qD
qD
qD
MRD (pDpu)
MRD (pNpN)
  • Day vs. night pricing (phone, electricity)
  • Lower night price increases night demand and
    decreases optimal day price (wrt to independent
    demand level)

25
Direct Discrimination Inter-related Demands
pN
Night
DN (pDpD)
pN
pN
DN (pDpu)
qN
qN
qN
MRN (pDpu)
MRN (pDpD)
  • Higher day price increases night demand and
    optimal night price (wrt to independent demand
    level)

26
Direct Discrimination Inter-related Demands
  • Mathematically

27
Direct Discrimination Inter-related Demands
  • Lets assume a symmetric demand system
    (substitution effects are identical)

gt0 (lets assume 1 is a larger mkt)
gt0
28
Direct Discrimination Inter-related Demands
  • If elasticity 2 gt elasticity 1 then p1gtp2
  • If smaller mkt has more elastic dd, it must have
    a lower p
  • Price discrimination also applies in more general
    case of related demands (there are several cases,
    however)
  • Other related demands
  • Durable goods markets (higher price today makes
    some people wait for tomorrow)
  • Monday night movie discounts

29
(No Transcript)
30
Direct Discrimination Welfare
p
p1
p2
D1 D2
MC
p2
D2
p1
D1
q1
q1
q2
q2
Q
MR
Q
MR1
MR2
  • In some cases, price discrimination provides
    goods and services to groups that would not have
    access under uniform pricing
  • Prescription drugs developed vs. developing
    countries

31
Direct Discrimination Welfare
  • Firm is better off (in the worst case the firm is
    as well off)
  • Consumers in low elasticity markets are worse off
  • Consumers in high elasticity markets are better
    off
  • Total welfare usually increases
  • A necessary condition is that total output
    increases
  • Intuition different prices are not Pareto
    optimal for consumers (resale can be performed).
    If quantity sold is the same under price
    discrimination, welfare has to be lower
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