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7-3: OTHER MARKET STRUCTURES

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7-3: OTHER MARKET STRUCTURES CHARACTERISTICS OF MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION Monopolistic competition: when many sellers offer similar, but not standardized products ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 7-3: OTHER MARKET STRUCTURES


1
7-3 OTHER MARKET STRUCTURES
2
CHARACTERISTICS OF MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • Monopolistic competition when many sellers offer
    similar, but not standardized products

3
CHARACTERISTICS OF MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
(CONTINUED)
  • 2 features of monopolistic competition are
    product differentiation and nonprice competition
  • Product differentiation attempt to distinguish a
    product from similar products

4
CHARACTERISTICS OF MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
(CONTINUED)
  • Nonprice competition using factors other than
    low price, such as style, service, advertising,
    or giveaways to convince consumers to buy their
    products

5
4 CHARACTERISTICS OF MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • 1. Many sellers and many buyers
  • Meaningful competition exists
  • Example there are many restaurants where you can
    buy a hamburger

6
4 CHARACTERISTICS OF MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
(CONTINUED)
  • 2. Similar but differentiated products
  • Sellers try to convince consumers that their
    product is different from that of the competition

7
4 CHARACTERISTICS OF MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
(CONTINUED)
  • 3. Limited control of prices
  • Product differentiation gives producers limited
    control over price
  • Consumers will buy substitute goods if the price
    goes too high

8
4 CHARACTERISTICS OF MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
(CONTINUED)
  • 4. Freedom to enter or exit the market
  • No huge barriers to enter a monopolistically
    competitive market
  • When firms make a profit, other firms enter the
    market and increase competition

9
EXAMPLES OF MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • Banks Sporting Goods
  • Radio Stations Fish and Seafood
  • Clothing Jewelry
  • Computers Health Spas
  • Frozen Foods Apparel Stores
  • Canned Goods Convenience Stores

10
OLIGOPOLY
  • Definition market structure in which only a few
    sellers offer a similar product
  • Few large firms have a large market share
    percent of total sales in a market

11
OLIGOPOLY (CONTINUED)
  • There are few firms in an oligopoly due to high
    start-up coststhe expenses that a new business
    faces when it enters a market

12
4 CHARACTERISTICS OF OLIGOPOLIES
  • 1. Few sellers and many buyers
  • Generally where the 4 largest firms control 40
    of the market
  • Example breakfast cereal industry

13
4 CHARACTERISTICS OF OLIGOPOLIES (CONTINUED)
  • 2. Standardized or differentiated products
  • Products can be standard such as steel
  • They try to differentiate themselves based on
    brand name, service, or location
  • Or, products can be differentiated such as cereal
    and soft drinks
  • They use marketing strategies to separate them
    from competitors

14
4 CHARACTERISTICS OF OLIGOPOLIES (CONTINUED)
  • 3. More control of prices
  • Each firm had a large enough share of the market
    that its decisions about price and supply affect
    one another

15
4 CHARACTERISTICS OF OLIGOPOLIES (CONTINUED)
  • 4. Little freedom to enter or exit market
  • Set-up costs are high
  • Firms have established brands, making it hard for
    new firms to enter the market successfully

16
OLIGOPOLY EXAMPLES
  • Soft drinks/Sodas
  • Coca-Cola (44) Coke, Sprite, Barq, Fanta,
    Mello Yello, etc.
  • Pepsi (32) Pepsi, Mountain Dew, Mug, Slice,
    etc.
  • Cadbury Schweppes (16) Seven-Up, Dr. Pepper,
    Schweppes, A W, Canada Dry, Sunkist, Squirt,
    etc.

17
OLIGOPOLY EXAMPLES
  • CPU chips Duopoly (an industry with only two
    firms) Intel and AMD
  • Beer Anheuser-Busch, Coors, Miller
  • Automobiles (GM, Chrysler, Toyota, etc.)

18
7-4 REGULATION AND DEREGULATION TODAY
19
REGULATION
  • Definition set of rules or laws designed to
    control business behavior to promote competition
    and protect consumers

20
ANTITRUST LEGISLATION
  • Definition laws that define monopolies and give
    government the power to control them and break
    them up

21
TRUST
  • Trust when a group of firms are combined to
    reduce competition in an industry
  • Example Standard Oil Company

22
MERGER
  • Merger when 2 firms join together to become 1
  • If a merger will eliminate competition it will be
    denied by the government

23
ENFORCING ANTITRUST LEGISLATION
  • The FTC and the Department of Justice are
    responsible for enforcing antitrust laws

24
DEREGULATION
  • Definition reducing or removing government
    control of a business
  • Results in lower prices for consumers and more
    competition
  • Example airline industry was deregulated in 1978

25
QUESTIONS
  • 1. In 2005, a major U.s. automaker announced a
    new discount plan for its cars for the month of
    June. It offered consumers the same price that
    its employees paid for new cars. When the
    automaker announced in early July that it was
    extending the plan for another month, the other 2
    major U.S. automakers announced similar plans.
    What market structure is exhibited in this story
    and what specific characteristics of that market
    structure does it demonstrate?

26
  • 2. Why do manufacturers of athletic shoes spend
    money to sign up professional athletes to wear
    and promote their shoes rather than
    differentiating their products strictly on the
    basis of physical characteristics such as design
    and comfort?

27
  • 3. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 included
    provisions to deregulate the cable industry. In
    2003, consumers complained that cable rates had
    increased by 45 since the law was passed. Only
    5 of American homes had a choice of more than 1
    cable provider in 2003. Those homes paid about
    17 less than those with no choice of cable
    provider. How effective had deregulation been in
    the cable industry by 2003? Explain your
    reasoning.
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