Market Structures - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Market Structures

Description:

Market structures around the world – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:139
Slides: 54
Provided by: sanabilzehra
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Market Structures


1
(No Transcript)
2
INTRODUCTION TO MARKET STRUCTURE
  • Market structure is best defined as the
    organizational and other characteristics of a
    market.
  • FEATURES
  • The number of firms.
  • The market share of the largest firms.
  • The nature of costs. 
  • The turnover of customers. 

3
Four Basic Market Structures
4
CLASSIFICATION OF MARKET STRUCTURES
5
Perfect Competition
6
Perfect Competition
  • In economic theory, perfect competition (sometim
    es called pure competition) describes markets
    such that no participants are large enough to
    have the market power to set the price of a
    homogeneous product. Because the conditions
    for perfect competition are strict, there are few
    if any perfectly competitive markets.
    Wikipedia

7
Characteristics
  • A large number of small firms,
  • A homogeneous product, and
  • Very easy entry into or exit from the market.

8
Large Number Of Small Firms
  • The large-number-of-sellers condition is met when
    each firm is so small relative to the total
    market that no single firm can influence the
    market price.

9
Homogeneous Product
  • If a product is homogeneous, buyers are
    indifferent as to which sellers product they
    buy.

10
Very Easy Entry And Exit
  • Perfect competition requires that resources be
    completely mobile to freely enter or exit a
    market.

11
Perfect Competitive Firm as a Price Taker
  • The term Price Taker means that it is a seller
    present in the market who does not have any
    control over the price of the product it sells in
    the market.

12
Perfect Competitive Firm As A Price Taker
13
Short-Run Profit Maximization for a Perfectly
Competitive Firm
  • in a perfectly competitive market no individual
    firm decides the price of a product.
  • Two methods which ensure profit maximization
  • Total Revenue-Total Cost Method
  • Marginal Revenue Equals Marginal Cost Method

14
Total Revenue Total Cost Method
15
Marginal Revenue Equals Marginal Cost Method
16
Three Types Of Long-Run Supplies
  • Three Types of Long-Run Supplies are
  • Constant-Cost Industry
  • Decreasing-Cost Industry
  • Increasing-Cost Industry

17
(No Transcript)
18
FEATURES
  • No Competition
  • Abnormal Profits
  • Price Makers
  • Barriers to Entry
  • Imperfect Information
  • Non-Homogeneous Products

19
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
20
NATURAL BARRIERS
  • Control of Supply
  • Economies of Scale
  • Expense
  • Legal Considerations

21
ARTICIAL BARRIERS
  • Restriction on Supplies
  • Predatory Pricing
  • Exclusive Dealing

22
ADVANTAGES OF MONOPOLY
  • Economies of Scale
  • Research and Development
  • Lower Prices
  • The ability to compete in Global Markets

23
DISADVANTAGES OF MONOPOLY
  • Poor levels of services
  • Low output and high prices
  • Producer sovereignty

24
The Price a Monopolist Will Charge
  • To determine the profit-maximizing price (where
    MC MR), first find the profit maximizing
    output.

25
Determining the Monopolists Price and Output
26
A Monopolist Making a Profit
  • A monopolist can make a profit.

27
A Monopolist Making a Profit
Price
Quantity
0
28
A Monopolist Breaking Even
  • A monopolist can break even.

29
A Monopolist Breaking Even
Price
Quantity
0
30
A Monopolist Making a Loss
  • A monopolist can make a loss.

31
A Monopolist Making a Loss
Price
Quantity
0
32
Monopoly Profit and Loss
  • A monopolist will suspend operations in the short
    run if its price does not exceed the average
    variable cost at the quantity the firm produces.
  • A monopolist will shut down permanently if
    revenue is not likely to equal or exceed all
    costs in the long run.
  • In contrast, however, if a monopolist makes a
    profit, barriers to entry will keep other firms
    out of the industry.

33
(No Transcript)
34
What is Oligopoly?
  • Oligopoly is a market structure characterized by
    a small number of relatively large firms that
    dominates an industry. The market can be
    dominated by as few as two firms or as many as
    twenty, and still be considered oligopoly.
  • Oligopolies can result from various forms of
    collusion which reduce competition and lead to
    higher costs for consumers

35
FEATURES
  • The distinctive feature of an oligopoly is
    interdependence. Oligopolies are typically
    composed of a few large firms.
  • Each firm is so large that its actions affect
    market conditions.
  • The competing firms will be aware of a firm's
    market actions and will respond appropriately.

36
Types of Oligopolies
  • Pure Oligopoly
  • Differentiated Oligopoly
  • Collusive Oligopoly
  • Non-collusive Oligopoly

37
CHARACTERISTICS
  • Small Number of Large Firms
  • Identical or Differentiated Product
  • Barriers to Entry
  • Profit maximization condition
  • Perfect knowledge
  • Non price competition
  • Mergers
  • Collusion

38
Kinked Demand Curve
  • Kinked-Demand Curve is used to illustrate
    short-run activity of Oligopoly.
  • Primary use of the kinked-demand curve is to
    explain price inflexibility in oligopoly market.
  • It has two distinct segments with different
    elasticity that joins to form a bend which is
    termed as kink. The two segments are
  • A relatively more elastic segment for price
    increases
  • A relatively less elastic segment for price
    decreases.

39
Kinked Demand Curve
40
(No Transcript)
41
DUOPOLY
  • When there are two sellers only that market
    situation is known as Duopoly.
  • Augustine Cornet (1801-77) originally allied the
    theory of duopoly .

42
The Two Principal Duopoly Models
  • Bertrand Duopoly The Bertrand model, wherein, a
    game of two companies, each one of them will
    shoulder that the second company will not change
    the prices in reaction to its price cuts.
  • Cornet Duopoly The Cournot model, which shows
    that two companies assume each other's output and
    gives this as a fixed amount, and produce in
    their own firm according to this.

43
(No Transcript)
44
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • When all or some of the conditions of perfect
    competition are not present, the market is called
    imperfect competition.
  • Monopolistic competition is one of the kinds of
    imperfect competition.
  • The basic product in monopolistic competition
    stays the same.

45
CHARACTERISTICS
  • Many sellers in market
  • Differentiated products
  • Ease of entry or exit
  • Information is readily available
  • Firms are price makers
  • Firms usually have to engage advertising.

46
Monopolistic Competition in Long Run
  • Super-normal profits attract in new entrants
    because of which the demand curve for the old
    firms shifts to the left or you can say the
    demand for the product of old firms decreases.
    New firms will only continue till they would get
    the normal profits

47
Types of Price Discrimination
  • By time
  • By geography
  • By branding
  • By age group

48
Advantages of price discrimination to the firm
  • Earn higher revenue
  • Have higher sales
  • Earn higher profit
  • Have higher capacity utilization
  • Have lower average fixed cost
  • Have higher market share.

49
Market Structures in a Nutshell
50
Types of Market Structures
  • Perfect Competition Many firms, freedom of
    entry, homogeneous product, normal profit.
  • Monopoly One firm dominates the market, barriers
    to entry, possibly supernormal profit.
  • Oligopoly An industry dominated by a few firms.
  • Monopolistic Competition Freedom of entry and
    exit, but firms have differentiated products.
    Likelihood of normal profits in the long term.
  • Duopoly When there are two sellers only that
    market situation is known as Duopoly. It is the
    simplest form of Oligopoly

51
CONCLUSION
52
SUBMITTED BYMarium Mahmood (1411153) Asad Khan
(1411156) Yumna Waqar (1411171) Sanabil Zehra
(1411165) Nabeel Hafeez Hoorani (1411160)
53
THANK YOU!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com