Title: Avoiding the Bertrand Trap
1Avoiding the Bertrand Trap
- Part I Differentiation and other strategies
2The Bertrand Trap
- Recall the models assumptions
- they produce a homogeneous product
- they have unlimited capacity
- they play once (alternatively, myopically, or w/o
ability to punish) customers know prices. - customers face no switching costs
- the firms have the same, constant marginal cost
3Bertrand Model
4An Easier Bertrand Model
P
firm demand
mkt. demand
v
pmin
Q
D
5Avoiding the Bertrand Trap
- Avoiding the trap means altering these
assumptions that is, doing at least one of the
following - dont produce a homogeneous product
- dont have unlimited capacity
- dont play myopically (facilitate tacit
collusion) - make it difficult for customers to learn prices
- make it difficult for customers to switch from
one firm to the other - lower your costs
6Avoiding the Trap Method 1
- Lowering your costs.
- Lower your MC to k lt c, where c is your rivals
MC. - Equilibrium you charge po c - ?, where ? is a
very small amount and your rival charges pr c. - Proof An equilibrium p gt c would lead to
Bertrand undercutting, so p ??c in equilibrium.
Your rival will never charge less than c, so you
can get away with charging c - ?.
7Potential Problems with Method 1
- Question is sustainability of cost advantage
- Could fail the I test in VRIO.
- Care that cost-cutting today does not result in
negative long-run consequences. - Could make firm vulnerable to fluctuations in
trade policy (if cost advantage gained by
exporting jobs).
8Avoiding the Trap Method 2
- Limiting capacity
- Let K1 and K2 be the capacities of the two firms.
- For convenience, assume a flat demand curve
(i.e., easier model). - If K1 K2 ? D, then no problem equilibrium is
p v (i.e., monopoly pricing) there is no
danger of undercutting on price because neither
rival can handle the additional business.
9Limiting Capacity
- If K1 K2 gt D, but Kt lt D for t 1,2 then
monopoly price (i.e., v) cannot be sustained
because of undercutting. - However, each firm is guaranteed a profit of at
least (D - Kr)(v - c) gt 0, where Kr is the
rivals capacity. - Equilibrium in this simple model involves
complicated mixed strategies. - But positive profits made!
10Choosing Capacities
- It turns out that the game in which firms first
choose their capacities and then play a
Bertrand-like game is equivalent to Cournot
competition.
11Cournot Competition
- Firms simultaneously choose quantity (capacity).
- If Q is total quantity, then price is such that
all quantity just demanded that is, so D(p) Q. - Note we are abstracting away the firms ability to
set their own prices, but this turns out to be
without consequence in equilibrium and it vastly
simplifies the analysis.
12Cournot Competition continued
- Assume two identical competitors.
- Each has a constant marginal cost of c.
- If you think rival will produce qr , then your
demand curve is D(p)-qr .
13Your Best Response
Price
qr
p
Market demand
Your demand
c
MR
Quantity
qo
14If Rival Produces More
Price
qr
? Price falls
p
Market demand
Your demand
c
MR
Quantity
qo
? Your quantity goes down
15Insights
- Despite competition, you make a positive profit
(price gt unit cost). - You produce less if you think rival will produce
more (have less capacity if you think rival will
have more). - Your profits decrease with the output (capacity)
of rival.
16Equilibrium of Cournot Game
Price
In equilibrium, must play mutual best responses.
Given assumed symmetry, this means qo qr .
qr
p
Your demand
Market demand
c
MR
Quantity
qo
17Comparison with Monopoly
Price
Monopoly price
Market demand
c
Monopolists MR
Quantity
qo
Qm
18More Insights
- Relative to monopoly, Cournot competition results
in more output and lower prices. - That is two means a lower price and more output
than one. - Logic continues Three Cournot competitors
results in a lower price and more output than
with two. - In general, prices and firm profits fall as the
number of Cournot competitors increases. - Again, the danger of entry and emulation.
19Summary of Method 2
- Limiting capacity is a way to escape or avoid the
Bertrand Trap. - Competition in capacity is like the Cournot
model. - Lessons of the Cournot model
- Firms charge lower price than monopoly, so still
room for improvement through tacit collusion or
other strategies. - The more competitors, the lower will be price.
20Avoiding the Trap Method 3
- Raise consumer search costs
- Return to basic assumptions, except assume that
it costs a consumer s gt 0 to visit a second
firm (store). - Let pe be the equilibrium price. That is, the
price consumers expect to pay. Then each firm
can charge p minpe s,v, because a customer
would not be induced to visit a second store.
21Raise Consumer Search Costs
- Since customers expect both firms to charge pe,
customers are evenly divided between the firms. - There is no benefit to undercutting on price,
since if rival is not charging more than
minpes,v, you wont attract any of its
customers. - Pressure now is to raise prices.
- Equilibrium is pe v i.e., the monopoly price.
22Issues with Implementation
- How to keep search costs high?
- Must prevent price advertising.
- Must ensure comparison shopping hard (or
pointless). - Preventing price advertising.
- Lobby govt to make illegal (liquor stores)
- Gentlemens agreement (a form of tacit
collusion) - Have professional association prohibit (generally
found to be violation of antitrust laws)
23Making Comparison Shopping Hard
- Limit store hours
- Detroit automobile dealers
- Closing laws (more govt lobbying)
- Do not readily supply price information
- automobile dealers again
- use multiple prices (extras on cars,
supermarkets) - Make it pointless
- guarantee lowest price
- meeting competition clauses
24Avoiding the Trap Method 4
- Raise consumers switching costs
- Return to assumptions of basic model, except now
consumers are initially allocated equally to the
two firms and must pay w to switch to another
firm. Consumers know the prices at both firms.
25Raising Switching Costs
- Consider easier model of Bertrand.
- Assume, first, that w ? ½(v - c).
- An equilibrium exists in which both firms charge
monopoly price, v - To steal rivals customers must charge
- v w e.
- Profits from stealing
- (v w e c)D .
- Profits from not stealing
- (v c)D/2,
- which is less.
26Raise Consumers Switching Costs
- If w lt ½(v - c), then complicated equilibrium in
mixed strategies. - We know, however, that each firm can charge at
least c 2w (which is less than v) - To profitably undercut a price of c 2w, a firm
would have to drop price to below c w. But - (c 2w c ) D/2 gt (c w - e - c)D
- Although equilibrium difficult to calculate, we
thus know positive profits made in it.
27Method 5 Product Differentiation
- Two firms with identical, constant MC c.
- Customers differ in their preferences. Imagine
that customers are uniformly distributed along
the unit interval with respect to taste. - E.g.,
- Assume customers each want one unit.
- Technical details See the product
differentiation handout on the website.
28Equilibrium with Great Differentiation
Firm 1s price
Firm 0s price
D0(p0p)
D1(p1p)
p
MC
MR0
MR1
0
0
Firm 0s quantity
Firm 1s quantity
29Equilibrium with Modest Differentiation
Firm 1s price
Firm 0s price
D0(p0p)
D1(p1p)
p
MC
MR0
MR1
0
0
Firm 0s quantity
Firm 1s quantity
30Equilibrium with Even Less Differentiation
Firm 0s price
Firm 1s price
D0(p0p)
D1(p1p)
p
p
MC
MR0
MR1
0
0
Firm 0s quantity
Firm 1s quantity
31An Experiment
- In this experiment, you need to decide where to
locate in a differentiated market. - The market works as follows
- Consumers are located on a number line from 1 to
63. - There is one consumer at each location.
- Every consumer will pay 1 to buy one unit of the
product, but only from the nearest store. - If there is a tie, then a consumer buys
fractional units from all the equally distant
stores. - A monopolist can locate anywhere and make 63
because all consumers will buy from the
monopolist and pay 1 each. - Costs
- Entry costs 20.
- Marginal cost is 0.
32Experiment continued
- Rules
- I will invite people (as individuals or teams of
3 or fewer) to enter. - You must choose a location that is a counting
number between 1 and 63 inclusive (i.e., 3.5 is
not a valid location). - When people cease to be willing to enter, I will
collect the entry fees and return profits
according to location.
33Analysis of Experiment
- (This slide intentionally left blank for you to
write your notes. For full version of slides,
download them after 430pm, April 8.)
34Conclusions
- You can avoid or escape the Bertrand Trap if
- You can achieve a cost advantage (Method 1)
- You can limit capacity (Method 2)
- Cournot competition
- You can raise search costs (Method 3)
- Sneaky benefits to price matching guarantees
- You can raise switching costs (Method 4)
- You can differentiate your product (Method 5)
35But
- Some of these solutions can be vulnerable to lack
of market discipline or entry/emulation - Others may be able to cut costs too.
- Others may attempt to capture business by
lowering search or switching costs. - Others may not be disciplined about capacity.
- Entry can erode benefits of limited capacity.
- Others may not be disciplined about maintaining
brand distinctions. - Entry can erode benefits of differentiation.
36 which points to
- Importance of maintaining discipline
- Topic for next time Method 6 tacit collusion.
- Importance of deterring entry
- Topic for later in term.