Title: Costs and Market Structure
1Costs and Market Structure
2Basic ideas
- Determinants of market structure how many firms
in an industry? - Economies of scale Cost functions
- Minimum efficient scale
- Role of demand
- Other determinants
3Size distribution U.S. Businesses 2003
4Average size of firms
5Average size firms (Manufacturing)
6Observations
- Huge variation in firm size
- Causes?
- Economies of scale
- Market size
7Cost functions
- Cost C(q)
- Implicit technology and input prices
- AC(q) C(q)/q
- MC(q) dC/dq
- Typical case C(q) VC(q) F
8Cost curves an illustration
Typical average and marginal cost curves
/unit
Relationship between AC and MC
MC
If MC lt AC then AC is falling
AC
If MC gt AC then AC is rising
MC AC at the minimum of the AC curve (efficient
scale)
Quantity
9Economies of scale
- Definition average costs fall with an increase
in output - Represented by the scale economy index
AC(Q)
S
MC(Q)
- S gt 1 economies of scale
- S lt 1 diseconomies of scale
- S 1 at point of Min avg cost
- Minimum efficient scale smallest output level at
which economies of scale are exhausted
10Economies of scale
- Sources of economies of scale
- the 60 rule capacity related to volume while
cost is related to surface area - product specialization and the division of labor
- economies of mass reserves economize on
inventory, maintenance, repair - Indivisibilities
11Fixed costs and economies of scale
- Larger fixed costs ? larger economies of scale
- Larger efficient scale
- Example C(q) Fq2/2
- MC q
- AC F/q q/2
- Min AC q F/q q/2
- q/2 F/q ? q2 2F ? q sqrt (2F)
- Min AC Min MC also equal sqrt (2F)
- Min efficient scale increases with F
12Fixed costs and Economies of Scale
13Marginal costs and economies of scale
- Steeper marginal cost ? less economies of scale
- Lower efficient scale
- Example C(q) Fq2
- MC q
- AC F/q q
- Min AC 2q F/q q
- q F/q ? q2 F ? q sqrt (F)
- Min AC Min MC 2qMES 2 sqrt(F)
- Minimum efficient scale smaller than before
14Marginal costs and Economies of scale
15Economies of Scope
- Producing goods jointly is cheaper
- Similar to economies of scale
- Sources of economies of scope
- shared inputs
- same equipment for various products
- shared advertising creating a brand name
- marketing and RD expenditures that are generic
- cost complementarities
- producing one good reduces the cost of producing
another - oil and natural gas
- oil and benzene
- computer software and computer support
- retailing and product promotion
16Market Structure
- Economies of scale and scope affect market
structure but cannot be looked at in isolation. - They must be considered relative to market size.
- Should see concentration decline as market size
increases - Entry to the medical profession is going to be
more extensive in Chicago than in Oxford, Miss - Find more extensive range of financial service
companies in Wall Street, New York than in
Frankfurt
17Number of firms in Competitive Industry
- p A BQ
- Firms are price takers
- In long run equilibrium no further incentives to
enter the industry. If firms are homogeneous,
zero profits. - Implies p min AC, qqMES
- Number of firms N so that p A-BNqMES
- N (A p)/BqMES
- Higher demand (higher A or lower B) ? more firms
- Lower qMES ? more firms
- Lower min AC ? lower p ? more firms
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20Other determinants of Market structure
- Network externalities
- willingness to pay by a consumer increases as the
number of current consumers increase - telephones, fax, Internet, Windows software
- utility from consumption increases when there are
more current consumers - These markets are likely to contain a small
number of firms - even if there are limited economies of scale and
scope
21Other determinants of Market structure
- Policy
- Government can directly affect market structure
- by limiting entry
- taxi medallions in Boston and New York
- airline regulation
- through the patent system
- by protecting competition e.g. through the
Robinson-Patman Act