Title: Monopolistic Competition
1Monopolistic Competition
- A monopolistically competitive industry has the
following characteristics - A large number of firms
- No barriers to entry
- Product differentiation
2Monopolistic Competition
- Monopolistic competition is a common form of
industry (market) structure in the United States,
characterized by a large number of firms, none of
which can influence market price by virtue of
size alone. - Some degree of market power is achieved by firms
producing differentiated products. - New firms can enter and established firms can
exit such an industry with ease.
3Nine Industries with Characteristics of
Monopolistic Competition
Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in Selected Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in Selected Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in Selected Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in Selected Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in Selected Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in Selected Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in Selected Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in Selected Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in Selected Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in Selected Industries, 1992
SIC NO. INDUSTRYDESIGNATION FOURLARGESTFIRMS FOURLARGESTFIRMS EIGHTLARGESTFIRMS EIGHTLARGESTFIRMS TWENTYLARGESTFIRMS TWENTYLARGESTFIRMS NUMBEROFFIRMS NUMBEROFFIRMS
3792 Travel trailers and campers 41 57 72 270
3942 Dolls 34 47 67 204
2521 Wood office furniture 26 34 51 611
2731 Book publishing 23 38 62 2504
2391 Curtains and draperies 22 32 48 1004
2092 Fresh or frozen seafood 19 28 47 600
3564 Blowers and fans 14 22 41 518
2335 Womens dresses 11 17 30 3943
3089 Miscellaneous plastic products 5 8 13 7605
Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997.
4Product Differentiation, Advertising, and Social
Welfare
Total Advertising Expenditures in 1998 Total Advertising Expenditures in 1998 Total Advertising Expenditures in 1998 Total Advertising Expenditures in 1998
DOLLARS(BILLIONS) DOLLARS(BILLIONS)
Newspapers 44.2
Television 48.0
Direct mail 39.5
Other 31.7
Yellow pages 12.0
Radio 14.5
Magazines 10.4
Total 200.3
Source McCann Erickson, Inc., Reported in U.S. Bureau of the Census, Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1999, Table 947. Source McCann Erickson, Inc., Reported in U.S. Bureau of the Census, Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1999, Table 947. Source McCann Erickson, Inc., Reported in U.S. Bureau of the Census, Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1999, Table 947. Source McCann Erickson, Inc., Reported in U.S. Bureau of the Census, Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1999, Table 947.
5The Case for Product Differentiation and
Advertising
- The advocates of free and open competition
believe that differentiated products and
advertising give the market system its vitality
and are the basis of its power. - Product differentiation helps to ensure high
quality and efficient production.
6The Case for Product Differentiation and
Advertising
- Advertising provides consumers with the valuable
information on product availability, quality, and
price that they need to make efficient choices in
the market place.
7The Case Against Product Differentiation and
Advertising
- Critics of product differentiation and
advertising argue that they amount to nothing
more than waste and inefficiency. - Enormous sums are spent to create minute,
meaningless, and possibly nonexistent differences
among products.
8The Case Against Product Differentiation and
Advertising
- Advertising raises the cost of products and
frequently contains very little information.
Often, it is merely an annoyance. - People exist to satisfy the needs of the economy,
not vice versa. - Advertising can lead to unproductive warfare and
may serve as a barrier to entry, thus reducing
real competition.
9Product Differentiation Reduces the Elasticity of
Demand Facing a Firm
- Based on the availability of substitutes, the
demand curve faced by a monopolistic competitor
is likely to be less elastic than the demand
curve faced by a perfectly competitive firm, and
likely to be more elastic than the demand curve
faced by a monopoly.
10Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
- In the short-run, a monopolistically competitive
firm will produce up to the point where MR MC.
- This firm is earning positive profits in the
short-run.
11Monopolistic Competition in the Short-Run
- Profits are not guaranteed. Here, a firm with a
similar cost structure is shown facing a weaker
demand and suffering short-run losses.
12Monopolistic Competition in the Long-Run
- The firms demand curve must end up tangent to
its average total cost curve for profits to equal
zero. This is the condition for long-run
equilibrium in a monopolistically competitive
industry.
13Economic Efficiencyand Resource Allocation
- In the long-run, economic profits are eliminated
thus, we might conclude that monopolistic
competition is efficient, however
- Price is above marginal cost. More output could
be produced at a resource cost below the value
that consumers place on the product.
14Economic Efficiencyand Resource Allocation
- In the long-run, economic profits are eliminated
thus, we might conclude that monopolistic
competition is efficient, however
- Average total cost is not minimized. The typical
firm will not realize all the economies of scale
available. Smaller and smaller market share
results in excess capacity.
15Oligopoly
- An oligopoly is a form of industry (market)
structure characterized by a few dominant firms.
Products may be homogeneous or differentiated. - The behavior of any one firm in an oligopoly
depends to a great extent on the behavior of
others.
16Ten Highly Concentrated Industries
Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in High-Concentration Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in High-Concentration Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in High-Concentration Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in High-Concentration Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in High-Concentration Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in High-Concentration Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in High-Concentration Industries, 1992 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in High-Concentration Industries, 1992
SIC NO. INDUSTRYDESIGNATION FOURLARGESTFIRMS FOURLARGESTFIRMS EIGHTLARGESTFIRMS EIGHTLARGESTFIRMS NUMBEROFFIRMS NUMBEROFFIRMS
2823 Cellulosic man-made fiber 98 100 5
3331 Primary copper 98 99 11
3633 Household laundry equipment 94 99 10
2111 Cigarettes 93 100 8
2082 Malt beverages (beer) 90 98 160
3641 Electric lamp bulbs 86 94 76
2043 Cereal breakfast foods 85 98 42
3711 Motor vehicles 84 91 398
3482 Small arms ammunition 84 95 55
3632 Household refrigerators and freezers 82 98 52
Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997. Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1992 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing, Subject Series MC92-S-2, 1997.
17Oligopoly Models
- All kinds of oligopoly have one thing in common
- The behavior of any given oligopolistic firm
depends on the behavior of the other firms in the
industry comprising the oligopoly.
18The Collusion Model
- A group of firms that gets together and makes
price and output decisions jointly is called a
cartel. - Collusion occurs when price- and quantity-fixing
agreements are explicit. - Tacit collusion occurs when firms end up fixing
price without a specific agreement, or when
agreements are implicit.
19The Cournot Model
- The Cournot model is a model of a two-firm
industry (duopoly) in which a series of
output-adjustment decisions leads to a final
level of output between the output that would
prevail if the market were organized
competitively and the output that would be set by
a monopoly.
20The Kinked Demand Curve Model
- The kinked demand model is a model of oligopoly
in which the demand curve facing each individual
firm has a kink in it. The kink follows from
the assumption that competitive firms will follow
if a single firm cuts price but will not follow
if a single firm raises price.
21The Kinked Demand Curve Model
- Above P, an increase in price, which is not
followed by competitors, results in a large
decrease in the firms quantity demanded (demand
is elastic). - Below P, price decreases are followed by
competitors so the firm does not gain as much
quantity demanded (demand is inelastic).
22The Price-Leadership Model
- Price-leadership is a form of oligopoly in which
one dominant firm sets prices and all the smaller
firms in the industry follow its pricing policy.
23The Price-Leadership Model
- Assumptions of the price-leadership model
- The industry is made up of one large firm and a
number of smaller, competitive firms - The dominant firm maximizes profit subject to the
constraint of market demand and subject to the
behavior of the smaller firms - The dominant firm allows the smaller firms to
sell all they want at the price the leader has
set.
24The Price-Leadership Model
- Outcome of the price-leadership model
- The quantity demanded in the industry is split
between the dominant firm and the group of
smaller firms. - This division of output is determined by the
amount of market power that the dominant firm
has. - The dominant firm has an incentive to push
smaller firms out of the industry in order to
establish a monopoly.
25Predatory Pricing
- The practice of a large, powerful firm driving
smaller firms out of the market by temporarily
selling at an artificially low price is called
predatory pricing. - Such behavior became illegal in the United States
with the passage of antimonopoly legislation
around the turn of the century.
26Game Theory
- Game theory analyzes oligopolistic behavior as a
complex series of strategic moves and reactive
countermoves among rival firms. - In game theory, firms are assumed to anticipate
rival reactions.
27Payoff Matrix for Advertising Game
Bs STRATEGY Bs STRATEGY
As STRATEGY Do not advertise Advertise
Do not advertise As profit 50,000Bs profit 50,000 As loss 25,000Bs profit 75,000
Advertise As profit 75,000Bs loss 25,000 As profit 10,000Bs profit 10,000
- The strategy that firm A will actually choose
depends on the information available concerning
Bs likely strategy.
28Payoff Matrix for Advertising Game
Bs STRATEGY Bs STRATEGY
As STRATEGY Do not advertise Advertise
Do not advertise As profit 50,000Bs profit 50,000 As loss 25,000Bs profit 75,000
Advertise As profit 75,000Bs loss 25,000 As profit 10,000Bs profit 10,000
- Regardless of what B does, it pays A to
advertise. This is the dominant strategy, or the
strategy that is best no matter what the
opposition does.
29The Prisoners Dilemma
ROCKY ROCKY ROCKY ROCKY
GINGER Do not confess Confess Confess
Do not confess Ginger 1 yearRocky 1 year Ginger 7 yearsRocky free
Confess Ginger freeRocky 7 years Ginger 5 yearsRocky 5 years
- Both Ginger and Rocky have dominant strategies
to confess. Both will confess, even though they
would be better off if they both kept their
mouths shut.
30Payoff Matrix forLeft/Right-Top/Bottom Strategies
Original Game Original Game Original Game Original Game
Ds STRATEGY Ds STRATEGY
Cs STRATEGY Left Right
Top C wins 100D wins no C wins 100D wins 100
Bottom C loses 100D wins no C wins 200D wins 100
Bottom
- Because Ds behavior is predictable (he will play
the right-hand strategy), C will play bottom. - When all players are playing their best strategy
given what their competitors are doing, the
result is called Nash equilibrium.
31Payoff Matrix forLeft/Right-Top/Bottom Strategies
- C is likely to play top and guarantee herself a
100 profit instead of losing 10,000 to win
200, even if there is just a small chance of Ds
choosing left. - When uncertainty and risk are introduced, the
game changes. A maximin strategy is a strategy
chosen to maximize the minimum gain that can be
earned.
New Game New Game New Game New Game
Ds STRATEGY Ds STRATEGY
Cs STRATEGY Left Right
Top C wins 100D wins no C wins 100D wins 100
Bottom C loses 10,000D wins no C wins 200D wins 100
Bottom
32Contestable Markets
- A market is perfectly contestable if entry to it
and exit from it are costless. - In contestable markets, even large oligopolistic
firms end up behaving like perfectly competitive
firms. Prices are pushed to long-run average
cost by competition, and positive profits do not
persist.
33Oligopoly is Consistent witha Variety of
Behaviors
- The only necessary condition of oligopoly is that
firms are large enough to have some control over
price. - Oligopolies are concentrated industries. At one
extreme is the cartel, in essence, acting as a
monopolist. At the other extreme, firms compete
for small contestable markets in response to
observed profits. In between are a number of
alternative models, all of which stress the
interdependence of oligopolistic firms.
34Oligopoly and Economic Performance
- Oligopolies, or concentrated industries, are
likely to be inefficient for the following
reasons - They are likely to price above marginal cost.
This means that there would be underproduction
from societys point of view. - Strategic behavior can force firms into deadlocks
that waste resources. - Product differentiation and advertising may pose
a real danger of waste and inefficiency.
35The Role of Government
- The Celler-Kefauver Act of 1950 extended the
governments authority to ban vertical and
conglomerate mergers. - The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) is a
mathematical calculation that uses market share
figures to determine whether or not a proposed
merger will be challenged by the government.
36Regulation of Mergers
Calculation of a Simple Herfindahl-Hirschman Index for Four Hypothetical Industries, Each With No More Than Four Firms Calculation of a Simple Herfindahl-Hirschman Index for Four Hypothetical Industries, Each With No More Than Four Firms Calculation of a Simple Herfindahl-Hirschman Index for Four Hypothetical Industries, Each With No More Than Four Firms Calculation of a Simple Herfindahl-Hirschman Index for Four Hypothetical Industries, Each With No More Than Four Firms Calculation of a Simple Herfindahl-Hirschman Index for Four Hypothetical Industries, Each With No More Than Four Firms Calculation of a Simple Herfindahl-Hirschman Index for Four Hypothetical Industries, Each With No More Than Four Firms
PERCENTAGE SHARE OF PERCENTAGE SHARE OF PERCENTAGE SHARE OF PERCENTAGE SHARE OF HERFINDAHL-HIRSCHMANINDEX
FIRM 1 FIRM 2 FIRM 3 FIRM 4 HERFINDAHL-HIRSCHMANINDEX
Industry A 50 50 - - 502 502 5,000
Industry B 80 10 10 - 802 102 102 6,600
Industry C 25 25 25 25 252 252 252 252 2,500
Industry D 40 20 20 20 402 202 202 202 2,800
37Department of Justice Merger Guidelines (revised
1984)
ANTITRUST DIVISION ACTION ANTITRUST DIVISION ACTION ANTITRUST DIVISION ACTION
HHI 1,800 1,000 0 ConcentratedChallenge if Index is raised by more than 50 points by the merger
HHI 1,800 1,000 0 Moderate ConcentrationChallenge if Index is raised by more than 100 points by the merger
HHI 1,800 1,000 0 UnconcentratedNo challenge
HHI 1,800 1,000 0