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Title: Economics of Strategy


1
Economics of Strategy
Besanko, Dranove, Shanley and Schaefer, 3rd
Edition
Chapter 6 Competitors and Competition
Slide show prepared by Richard
PonArul California State University, Chico
? John Wiley ? Sons, Inc.
2
Introduction
  • Market structure affects market competition
  • highly concentrated markets tend to be stable
  • unconcentrated markets tend to be more
    competitive
  • In order to identify structure need to
  • identify competitors
  • define the market

3
Market Definition
  • A market is that set of suppliers and demanders
    whose trading establishes the price of a good.
  • Firms are in the same market if they constrain
    each others ability to raise price
  • Market definition lies at the heart of antitrust
    policy
  • compute market shares to identify market power
  • but then need to know the size of the market
  • so need to define the market

4
Market Definition
  • Simple conceptual guideline followed by
    anti-trust authorities merger with all the
    competitors should lead to a small but
    significant nontransitory increase in price
    (SNIP criterion)
  • Small, but significant 5 for US DoJ
  • 5 to 10 for EU
  • In practice, two firms can be said to compete if
    a price increase by one firm drives its customers
    to the other firm

5
Market definition (cont.)
  • Start with a thought experiment
  • suppose all firms in the supposed market could
    coordinate their prices
  • would they choose to raise prices by at least 5?
  • if yes then there are few outside competitors
  • the market is well defined
  • Related to own-price elasticity of demand

If ?x is small then sellers face few
constraints on their ability to raise prices.
change in quantity demanded of x
?x -
change in price of x
6
Market definition (cont.)
  • This approach relies on group elasticity
  • individual product elasticity might be high
  • RAS o Generali o Toro
  • but group elasticity would be low
  • if all three increase prices together they will
    lose little custom

7
Identifying Competitors
  • Any one who produces a substitute for a firms
    product is its competitor
  • How good a substitute is one product for another
    is measured by the cross price elasticity of
    demand
  • A firm may have competitors in several input
    markets and output markets at the same time

8
Direct and Indirect Competitors
  • Direct competitors Strategic choice of one firm
    directly affects the performance of the other
  • Indirect competitors Strategic choice of one
    firm affects the performance of the other because
    of a strategic reaction by a third firm

9
Characteristics of Substitutes
  • Two products tend to be close substitutes when
    these 3 criteria are jointly satisfied
  • They have similar performance characteristics
  • They have similar occasion for use and
  • They are sold in the same geographic area

10
Performance Characteristics
  • Listing of performance characteristics is a
    subjective but useful exercise
  • Products that belong to the same genre or fall
    under the same SIC need not be substitutes
    (Example Mercedes and Hyundai) if their
    performance characteristics are vastly different

11
Occasion for Use
  • Products may share characteristics but may differ
    in the way they are used
  • Orange juice and cola are beverages but used in
    different occasions
  • Another example could be hiking shoes versus
    court shoes

12
Competitor identification (cont.)
  • The 3 qualitative criteria can be supplemented
    by quantitative data
  • direct estimates of cross-price elasticities
  • price correlation
  • prices of substitute products tend to move
    together over time
  • allocated to the same Industrial Classification
    code
  • but at what level?
  • pharmaceuticals are in SIC code 2834
  • but not all drugs are substitutes
  • and competitors can be allocated to different SIC
    codes

13
Geographic Area
  • Identical products in two different geographic
    markets will not be substitutes due to
    transportation costs
  • Bulky products like cement cannot be transported
    over long distances to benefit from geographic
    price difference

14
Geographic Competitor Identification
  • When a firm sells in different geographical
    areas, it is important to be able identify the
    competitor in each area
  • Rather than rely on geographical demarcations,
    the firm should look at the flow of goods and
    services across geographic regions

15
Two Step Approach to Identifying Competitors in
the Area
  • First step is to find out where the customers
    come from (the catchment area)
  • The second step is to find out where the
    customers from the catchment area shop
  • With the technological innovations, some products
    like books and drugs are sold over the internet
    bringing in virtual competitors

16
Market Structure
  • Markets are often described by the degree of
    concentration
  • Monopoly is one extreme with the highest
    concentration - one seller
  • Perfect competition is the other extreme with
    innumerable sellers

17
Measuring Market Structure
  • A common measure of concentration is the N-firm
    concentration ratio - combined market share of
    the largest N firms
  • CR4 Si Si where Si is firms
    i market share and
  • i 1, 4
  • Herfindahl index is another which measures
    concentration as the sum of squared market shares
  • H Si Si2 where
  • i 1,.n (n is total number of firms in the
    market)

18
Four Classes of Market Structure
19
Market Structure and Competition
  • A monopoly market may produce the same outcomes
    as a competitive market (threat of entry)
  • A market with as few as two firms can lead to
    fierce competition
  • With monopolistic competition, how well
    differentiated the products are will determine
    the intensity of price competition

20
Perfect Competition
  • Many sellers who sell a homogenous product and
    many well informed buyers
  • Consumers can costlessly shop around and sellers
    can enter and exit costlessly
  • Each firm faces infinitely elastic demand

21
Zero Profit Condition
  • With perfect competition economic profits go to
    zero
  • Percentage contribution margin PCM equals (P -
    MC)/P where P and MC are price and marginal cost
    respectively
  • When profits are maximized PCM 1/? where ? is
    the elasticity of demand
  • Since ? is infinity, PCM 0

22
Conditions for Fierce Price Competition
  • Even if the ideal conditions are not present,
    price competition can be fierce when two or more
    of the following conditions are met
  • There are many sellers
  • Customers perceive the product to be homogenous
  • There is excess capacity

23
Many Sellers
  • With many sellers, cartels and collusive
    agreements harder to create
  • Cartels fail since some players will be tempted
    to cheat since small cheaters may go undetected
  • Even if the industry PCM is high, a low cost
    producer may prefer to set a low price

24
Homogenous Products
  • For firms that cut prices, customers switching
    from a competitor are likely to be the largest
    source of revenue gain
  • Customers are more likely to price shop when the
    product is perceived to be homogenous and hence
    sellers are more likely to compete on price

25
Excess Capacity
  • When a firm is operating below full capacity it
    can price below average cost as price covers the
    variable cost
  • If industry has excess capacity, prices fall
    below average cost and some firms may choose to
    exit
  • If exit is not an option (capacity is industry
    specific) excess capacity and losses will persist
    for a while

26
Monopoly
  • A monopolist faces little or no competition in
    the product market
  • Monopolist can act in an unconstrained way in
    setting prices
  • If some fringe firms exist, their decisions do
    not materially affect the monopolists profits

27
Monopoly and Output
  • A monopolist sets the price so that marginal
    revenue equals marginal cost
  • Thus the monopolists price is above the marginal
    cost and its output below the competitive level
  • The traditional anti-trust view is that limited
    output and higher prices hurt the consumer

28
Monopoly and Innovation
  • A monopolist often succeeds in becoming one by
    either producing more efficiently than others in
    the industry or meeting the consumers needs
    better than others
  • Hence, consumers may be net beneficiaries in
    situations where a firm succeeds in becoming a
    monopolist

29
Monopoly and Innovation
  • Monopolists are more likely to be innovative
    (than firms facing perfect competition) since
    they can capture some of the benefits of
    successful innovation
  • Since consumers also benefit from these
    innovations, they are hurt in the long run if the
    monopolists profits are restricted

30
Monopolistic Competition
  • There are many sellers and they believe that
    their actions will not materially affect their
    competitors
  • Each seller sells a differentiated product
  • Unlike under perfect competition, in monopolistic
    competition each firms demand curve is downward
    sloping rather than flat

31
Vertical and Horizontal Differentiation
  • Vertically differentiated products unambiguously
    differ in quality
  • Horizontally differentiated products vary in
    certain product characteristics to appeal to
    different consumer groups
  • An important source of horizontal differentiation
    is geographical location

32
Spatial Differentiation
  • Video rental outlets (or grocery stores) attract
    clientele based on their location
  • Consumers choose the store based on
    transportation costs
  • Transportation costs prevent switching for small
    differences in price

33
Spatial Differentiation
  • The idea of spatial location and transportation
    costs can be generalized for any attribute
  • Consumer preferences will be analogous to
    consumers physical location and the product
    characteristic will be analogous to store location

34
Spatial Differentiation
  • Transportation costs will be the the cost of
    the mismatch between the consumers tastes and
    the products attributes
  • Products are not perfect substitutes for each
    other
  • Some products are better substitutes (low
    transportation costs) than others

35
Theory of Monopolistic Competition
  • An important determinant of a firms demand is
    customer switching
  • Switching is less likely when
  • Customer preferences are idiosyncratic
  • Customers are not well informed about alternative
    sources of supply
  • Customers face high transportation costs

36
Theory of Monopolistic Competition
37
Theory of Monopolistic Competition
  • The demand curve DD is for the case when all
    sellers change their prices in tandem and
    customers do not switch between sellers
  • The demand curve dd is for the case when one
    seller changes the price in isolation and
    customers switch sellers
  • Sellers pricing strategy will depend on the
    slope of dd

38
Theory of Monopolistic Competition
  • If dd is relatively steep, sellers have no
    incentive to undercut their competitors since
    customers cannot be drawn away from them
  • If dd is relatively flat (stores are close to
    each other, products are not well differentiated)
    sellers lower prices to attract customers and end
    up with low contribution margins

39
Monopolistic Competition and Entry
  • Since each firms demand curve is downward
    sloping, the price will be set above marginal
    cost
  • If price exceeds average cost, the firm will earn
    economic profit
  • Existence of economic profits will attract new
    entrants until each firms economic profit is zero

40
Theory of Monopolistic Competition
  • Even if entry does not lower prices (highly
    differentiated products), new entrants will take
    away market share from the incumbents
  • The drop in revenue caused by entry will reduce
    the economic profit
  • If there is price competition (products that are
    not well differentiated) the erosion of economic
    profit will be quicker

41
Oligopoly
  • Market has a small number of sellers
  • Pricing and output decisions by each firm affects
    the price and output in the industry
  • Oligopoly models (Cournot, Bertrand) focus on how
    firms react to each others moves

42
Cournot Duopoly
  • In the Cournot model each of the two firms pick
    the quantities Q1 and Q2 to be produced
  • Each firm takes the other firms output as given
    and chooses the output that maximizes its profits
  • The price that emerges clears the market (demand
    supply)

43
Cournot Reaction Functions
44
Cournot Equilibrium
  • If the two firms are identical to begin with,
    their outputs will be equal
  • Each firm expects its rival to choose the Cournot
    equilibrium output
  • If one of the firms is off the equilibrium, both
    firms will have to adjust their outputs
  • Equilibrium is the point where adjustments will
    not be needed

45
Cournot Equilibrium
  • The output in Cournot equilibrium will be less
    than the output under perfect competition but
    greater than under joint profit maximizing
    collusion
  • As the number of firms increases, the output will
    drift towards perfect competition and prices and
    profits per firm will decline

46
Bertrand Duopoly
  • In the Bertrand model, each firm selects its
    price and stands ready to sell whatever quantity
    is demanded at that price
  • Each firm takes the price set by its rival as a
    given and sets its own price to maximize its
    profits
  • In equilibrium, each firm correctly predicts its
    rivals price decision

47
Bertrand Reaction Functions
48
Bertrand Equilibrium
  • If the two firms are identical to begin with,
    they will be setting the same price as each other
  • The price will equal marginal cost (same as
    perfect competition) since otherwise each firm
    will have the incentive to undercut the other

49
Cournot and Bertrand Compared
  • If the firms can adjust the output quickly,
    Bertrand type competition will ensue
  • If the output cannot be increased quickly
    (capacity decision is made ahead of actual
    production) Cournot competition is the result
  • In Bertrand competition two firms are sufficient
    to produce the same outcome as infinite number of
    firms

50
Bertrand Competition with Differentiation
  • When the products of the rival firms are
    differentiated, the demand curves are different
    for each firm and so are the reaction functions
  • The equilibrium prices are different for each
    firm and they exceed the respective marginal costs

51
Bertrand Competition with Differentiation
  • When products are differentiated, price cutting
    is not as effective a way to stealing business
  • At some point (prices still above marginal
    costs), reduced contribution margin from price
    cuts will not be offset by increased volume by
    customers switching

52
Price-Cost Margins and Concentration
  • Theory would predict that price-cost margins will
    be higher in industries with greater
    concentration (fewer sellers)
  • There could be other reasons for inter-industry
    variation in price-cost margins (regulation,
    accounting practices, concentration of buyers and
    so on)

53
Price-Cost Margins and Concentration
  • It is important to control for these extraneous
    factors if one need to study the relation between
    concentration and price-cost margin
  • Most studies focus on specific industries and
    compare geographically distinct markets

54
Evidence on Concentration and Price
  • For several industries, prices are found to be
    higher in markets with fewer sellers
  • In markets where the top three gasoline retailers
    had sixty percent share prices were 5 percent
    higher compared to markets where the top three
    had a fifty percent share
  • For service providers such as doctors and
    physicians, three sellers were enough to create
    intense price competition

55
Economies of Scale and Concentration
  • Industries with large minimum efficient scales
    compared to the size of the market tend to have
    high concentration
  • The inter-industry pattern of concentration is
    replicated across countries
  • When production/marketing enjoys economies of
    scale, entry is difficult and hence profits are
    high

56
Concentration and Profitability
  • The concentration and profitability have not been
    shown to have a strong relationship
  • Possible explanations
  • Differences in accounting practices may hide the
    differences in profitability
  • When the number of sellers is small it may be due
    to inherently unprofitable nature of the business
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