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Title: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly


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12
CHAPTER
Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
3
C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T
  • When you have completed your study of this
    chapter, you will be able to
  • Explain how price and quantity are determined in
    monopolistic competition.

Explain why selling costs are in monopolistic
competition.
Explain the dilemma faced by firms in oligopoly.
Use game theory to explain how price and quantity
are determined in oligopoly.
4
12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • Monopolistic competition is a market structure in
    which
  • A large number of firms compete.
  • Each firm produces a differentiated product.
  • Firms compete on price, product quality, and
    marketing.
  • Firms are free to enter and exit.

5
12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • Large Number of Firms
  • Like perfect competition, the market has a large
    number of firms. Three implications are
  • Small market share
  • No market dominance
  • Collusion impossible

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12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • Product Differentation
  • Product differentiation is making a product that
    is slightly different from the products of
    competing firms.
  • A differentiated product has close substitutes
    but it does not have perfect substitutes.
  • When the price of one firms product rises, the
    quantity demanded of that firms product
    decreases.

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12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • Competing on Quality, Price, and Marketing
  • Quality
  • Design, reliability, after-sales service, and
    buyers ease of access to the product.
  • Price
  • Because of product differentiation, the demand
    curve for the firms product is downward sloping.
  • Marketing
  • Advertising and packaging

8
12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • Entry and Exit
  • No barriers to entry.
  • So the firm cannot make economic profit in the
    long run.
  • Identifying Monopolistic Competition
  • Two indexes
  • The four-firm concentration ratio
  • The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index

9
12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • The Four-Firm Concentration Ratio
  • The four-firm concentration ratio is the
    percentage of the value of sales accounted for by
    the four largest firms in the industry.
  • The range of concentration ratio is from almost
    zero for perfect competition to 100 percent for
    monopoly.
  • A ratio that exceeds 60 percent is an indication
    of oligopoly.
  • A ratio of less than 40 percent is an indication
    of a competitive marketmonopolistic competition.

10
12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index
  • The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) is the
    square of the percentage market share of each
    firm summed over the largest 50 firms in a
    market.
  • Example, four firms with market shares as 50
    percent, 25 percent, 15 percent, and 10 percent.
  • HHI 502 252 152 102 3,450
  • A market with an HHI less than 1,000 is regarded
    as competitive and between 1,000 and 1,800 is
    moderately competitive.

11
12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • How, given its costs and the demand for its
    jeans, does Tommy Hilfiger decide the quantity of
    jeans to produce and the price at which to sell
    them?
  • The Firms Profit-Maximizing Decision
  • The firm in monopolistic competition makes its
    output and price decision just like a monopoly
    firm does.
  • Figure 12.1 on the next slide illustrates this
    decision.

12
12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
1. Profit is maximized when MR MC.
2. The profit-maximizing output is 125 pairs of
Tommy jeans per day.
3. The profit-maximizing price is 75 per pair.
ATC is 25 per pair, so
4. The firm makes an economic profit of 6,250 a
day.
13
12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • Long Run Zero Economic Profit
  • Economic profit induces entry and economic loss
    induces exit, as in perfect competition.
  • Entry decreases the demand for the product of
    each firm.
  • Exit increases the demand for the product of each
    firm.
  • In the long run, economic profit is competed away
    and firms earn normal profit.
  • Figure 12.2 on the next slide illustrates
    long-run equilibrium.

14
12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
1. The output that maximizes profit is 75 pairs
of Tommy jeans a day.
2. The price is 50 per pair. Average total cost
is also 50 per pair.
3. Economic profit is zero.
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12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • Monopolistic Competition and Efficiency
  • Efficiency requires that marginal benefit (price)
    equal marginal cost.
  • In monopolistic competition, price exceeds
    marginal costa sign of inefficiency.
  • But this inefficiency arises from product
    differentiationvarietythat consumers value and
    for which they are willing to pay.
  • So in a broader view, monopolistic competition
    brings gains to consumers.

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12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
  • Firms in monopolistic competition always have
    excess capacity in the long run.
  • Excess Capacity
  • A firm has excess capacity if the quantity it
    produces is less that the quantity at which
    average total cost is a minimum.
  • A firms efficient scale is the quantity of
    production at which average total cost is a
    minimum.
  • Figure 12.3 on the next slide shows the firms
    excess capacity in the long-run equilibrium.

17
12.1 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
1. The efficient scale is 100 pairs of jeans a
day.
2. In the long run, the firm produces less than
the efficient scale and has excess capacity.
3. Price exceeds 4. marginal cost.
5. Deadweight loss arise.
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12.2 DEVELOPMENT AND MARKETING
  • Innovation and Product Development
  • Wherever economic profits are earned, imitators
    emerge.
  • To maintain economic profit, a firm must seek out
    new products.
  • Cost Versus Benefit of Product Innovation
  • The firm must balance the cost and benefit at the
    margin.

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12.2 DEVELOPMENT AND MARKETING
  • Efficiency and Product Innovation
  • Regardless of whether a product improvement is
    real or imagined, its value to the consumer is
    its marginal benefit, which equals the amount the
    consumer is willing to pay.
  • The marginal benefit to the producer is the
    marginal revenue, which in equilibrium equals
    marginal cost.
  • Because price exceeds marginal cost, product
    improvement is not pushed to its efficient level.

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12.2 DEVELOPMENT AND MARKETING
  • Marketing
  • Firms in monopolistic competition spend a large
    amount on advertising and packaging their
    products.
  • Marketing Expenditures
  • A large proportion of the prices that we pay
    cover the cost of selling a good.
  • Figure 12.4 on the next slide shows some
    estimates of marketing expenditures for some
    familiar markets.

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12.2 DEVELOPMENT AND MARKETING
22
12.2 DEVELOPMENT AND MARKETING
  • Selling Costs and Total Costs
  • Selling costs such as advertising costs increase
    the costs of a monopolistically competitive firm
    above those of a perfectly competitive firm or a
    monopoly.
  • Advertising costs are fixed costs.
  • Advertising costs per unit decrease as production
    increases.
  • Figure 12.5 on the next slide illustrates the
    effects of selling costs on total cost.

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12.2 DEVELOPMENT AND MARKETING
1. When advertising costs are added to
2. The average total cost of production,
3. Average total cost increases by a greater
amount at small outputs than at large outputs.
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12.2 DEVELOPMENT AND MARKETING
  • 4. If advertising enables sales to increase from
    25 pairs of jeans a day to 100 pairs a day, it
    lowers the average total cost from 60 a pair to
    40 a pair.

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12.2 DEVELOPMENT AND MARKETING
  • Selling Costs and Demand
  • Advertising and other selling efforts change the
    demand for a firms product.
  • The effects are complex
  • A firms own advertising increases the demand for
    its product.
  • Advertising by all firms might decrease the
    demand for any one firms product and make demand
    more elastic.
  • The price might fall.

26
12.2 DEVELOPMENT AND MARKETING
  • Efficiency The Bottom Line
  • Because price exceeds marginal cost, monopolistic
    competition creates deadweight lossan indicator
    of inefficiency.
  • Price exceeds marginal cost because of product
    differentiation. But product variety is valued.
  • The bottom line is ambiguous. But compared to the
    alternative, monopolistic competition looks
    efficient.

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12.3 OLIGOPOLY
  • Another market type that stands between perfect
    competition and monopoly.
  • Oligopoly is a market type in which
  • A small number of firms compete.
  • Natural or legal barriers prevent the entry of
    new firms.

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12.3 OLIGOPOLY
  • In contrast to monopolistic competition and
    perfect competition, an oligopoly consists of a
    small number of firms.
  • Each firm has a large market share
  • The firms are interdependent
  • The firms have an incentive to collude

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12.3 OLIGOPOLY
  • Collusion
  • A cartel is a group of firms acting together to
    limit output, raise price, and increase economic
    profit.
  • Cartels are illegal but they do operate in some
    markets.
  • To study oligopoly, we look at the special case
    of duopoly.
  • A duopoly is a market in which there are only two
    producers.

30
12.3 OLIGOPOLY
  • Duopoly in Airplanes
  • Airbus and Boeing are the only makers of large
    commercial jets.
  • Monopoly Outcome
  • If this industry had only one firm, it would
    operate as a single-price monopoly.
  • Figure 12.6 on the next slide shows the monopoly
    outcome.

31
12.3 OLIGOPOLY
32
12.3 OLIGOPOLY
  • The Duopolists Dilemma

To achieve the monopoly profit, Airbus and Boeing
might attempt to form a cartel.
If the firms can agree to produce the monopoly
output of 6 airplanes a week, joint profits will
be 72 million .
33
12.3 OLIGOPOLY
  • Would it be in the self-interest of Airbus and
    Boeing to stick to the agreement and limit
    production to 3 planes a week each?
  • With price exceeding marginal cost, one firm can
    an increase its profit by increasing its output.
  • If both firms increased output when price exceeds
    marginal cost, the end of the process would be
    the same as perfect competition.

34
12.3 OLIGOPOLY
  • Perfect Competition
  • Equilibrium occurs where the marginal revenue
    curve intersects the demand curve.
  • The quantity produced is 12 planes a week and the
    price would be 1 million a plane.
  • Figure 12.6 shows the perfect competition outcome
    and the range of possible oligopoly outcomes.

35
12.3 OLIGOPOLY
36
12.3 OLIGOPOLY
Boeing Increases Output to 4 Airplanes a Week
  • Boeing can increase its economic profit by 4
    million, from 36 million to 40 million.

And cause the economic profit of Airbus to fall
by 6 million, from 36 million to 30 million.
37
12.3 OLIGOPOLY
  • Airbus Increases Output to 4 Airplanesa Week

For Airbus, this outcomeis an improvement on the
previous one by 2 milliona week.
For Boeing, the outcomeis worse than the
previous one by 8 million a week.
38
12.3 OLIGOPOLY
  • Boeing Increases Output to 5 Airplanesa Week

If Boeing increases output to 5 airplanes a week,
its economic profit falls.
Similarly, if Airbus increases output to 5
airplanes a week, its economic profit falls.
39
12.3 OLIGOPOLY
  • The Dilemma
  • If both firms stick to the monopoly output, they
    each produce 3 airplanes and make 36 million.
  • If they both increase production to 4 airplanes a
    week, they make 32 million each.
  • If only one firm increases production to 4
    airplanes a week, that firm makes 40 million.
  • What do they do?
  • Game theory provides an answer.

40
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • Game theory
  • The tool used to analyze strategic
    behaviorbehavior that recognizes mutual
    interdependence and takes account of the expected
    behavior of others.

41
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • What Is a Game?
  • All games involve three features
  • Rules
  • Strategies
  • Payoffs
  • Prisoners dilemma
  • A game between two prisoners that shows why it is
    hard to cooperate, even when it would be
    beneficial to both players to do so.

42
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • The Prisoners Dilemma
  • Art and Bob been caught stealing a car sentence
    is 2 years in jail.
  • DA wants to convict them of a big bank robbery
    sentence is 10 years in jail.
  • DA has no evidence and to get the conviction, the
    DA makes the prisoners play a game.

43
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • Rules
  • Players cannot communicate with one another.
  • If both confess to the larger crime, each will
    receive a sentence of 3 years for both crimes.
  • If one confesses and the accomplice does not,the
    one who confesses will receive a 1-year sentence,
    while the accomplice receives a10-year sentence.
  • If neither confesses, both receive a 2-year
    sentence.

44
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • Strategies
  • The strategies of a game are all the possible
    outcomes of each player.
  • The strategies in the prisoners dilemma are
  • Confess to the bank robbery.
  • Deny the bank robbery.

45
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • Payoffs
  • Four outcomes
  • Both confess.
  • Both deny.
  • Art confesses and Bob denies.
  • Bob confesses and Art denies.
  • A payoff matrix is a table that shows the payoffs
    for every possible action by each player given
    every possible action by the other player.

46
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • Table 12.5 shows the prisoners dilemma payoff
    matrix for Art and Bob.

47
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • Equilibrium
  • Occurs when each player takes the best possible
    action given the action of the other player.
  • Nash equilibrium
  • An equilibrium in which each player takes the
    best possible action given the action of the
    other player.

48
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • The Nash equilibrium for Art and Bob is to
    confess.
  • Not the Best Outcome
  • The equilibrium of the prisoners dilemma is not
    the best outcome.

49
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • The Duopolists Dilemma as a Game
  • Each firm has two strategies. It can produce
    airplanes at the rate of
  • 3 a week
  • 4 a week

50
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • Because each firm has two strategies, there are
    four possible combinations of actions
  • Both firms produce 3 a week (monopoly outcome).
  • Both firms produce 4 a week.
  • Airbus produces 3 a week and Boeing produces 4 a
    week.
  • Boeing produces 3 a week and Airbus produces 4 a
    week.

51
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • The Payoff Matrix
  • Table 12.6 shows the payoff matrix as the
    economic profits for each firm in each possible
    outcome.

52
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • Equilibrium of the Duopolists Dilemma
  • Both firms produce 4 a week.

Like the prisoners, the duopolists fail to
cooperate and get a worse outcome than the one
that cooperation would deliver.
53
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • Collusion is Profitable but Difficult to Achieve
  • The duopolists dilemma explains why it is
    difficult for firms to collude and achieve the
    maximum monopoly profit.
  • Even if collusion were legal, it would be
    individually rational for each firm to cheat on a
    collusive agreement and increase output.
  • In an international oil cartel, OPEC, countries
    frequently break the cartel agreement and
    overproduce.

54
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • Advertising and Research Games in Oligopoly
  • Advertising campaigns by Coke and Pepsi, and
    research and development (RD) competition
    between Procter Gamble and Kimberly-Clark are
    like the prisoners dilemma game.

55
12.4 GAME THEORY
Advertising Game
  • Coke and Pepsi have two strategies advertise or
    not advertise.

Table 16.8 shows the payoff matrix as the
economic profits for each firm in each possible
outcome.
56
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • The Nash equilibrium for this game is for both
    firms advertise.
  • But they could earn a larger joint profit if they
    could collude and not advertise.

57
12.4 GAME THEORY
Research and Development Game
  • PG and Kimberly-Clark have two strategies spend
    on RD or do no RD.
  • Table 16.9 shows the payoff matrix as the
    economic profits for each firm in each possible
    outcome.

58
12.4 GAME THEORY
The Nash equilibrium for this game is for both
firms to undertake RD.
But they could earn a larger joint profit if they
could collude and not do RD.
59
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • Repeated Games
  • Most real-world games get played repeatedly.
  • Repeated games have a larger number of strategies
    because a player can be punished for not
    cooperating.
  • This suggests that real-world duopolists might
    find a way of learning to cooperate so that they
    can enjoy monopoly profit.
  • The next slide shows the payoffs with a
    tit-for-tat response.

60
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • Week 1 Suppose Boeing contemplates producing 4
    planes a week.
  • Boeings profit will increase from 36 million to
    40 million and Airbuss profit will decrease
    from 36 million to 30 million.
  • Week 2 Airbus punishes Boeing and produces 4
    planes a week.

61
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • But Boeing must go back to 3 planes a week to
    induce Airbus to cooperate in week 3.
  • In week 2, Airbuss profit is 40 million and
    Boeings profit is 30 million.
  • Over the two weeks, Boeings profit would have
    been 72 million if it cooperated but only 70
    million with Airbuss tit-for-tat response.

62
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • In reality, where a duopoly works like a one-play
    game or a repeated game depends on the number of
    players and the ease of detecting and punishing
    overproduction.
  • The larger the number of players, the harder it
    is to maintain the monopoly outcome.

63
12.4 GAME THEORY
  • Is Oligopoly Efficient?
  • In oligopoly, price usually exceeds marginal
    cost.
  • So the quantity produced is less than the
    efficient quantity.
  • Oligopoly suffers from the same source and type
    of inefficiency as monopoly.
  • Because oligopoly is inefficient, antitrust laws
    and regulations are used to try to reduce market
    power and move the outcome closer to that of
    competition and efficiency.

64
A Game in YOUR Life
The payoff matrix here describes a game that
might be familiar to you the lovers dilemma.
Jane and Jim like to do things together. But Jane
likes the movies more than the ball game, and Jim
likes the ball game more than movies.
What do they do?
65
A Game in YOUR Life
You can figure out that Jim never goes to the
movies alone and Jane never goes to the game
alone.
So they out together. To the movies or the ball
game?
This game, unlike the prisoners dilemma, has no
unique equilibrium.
What do the payoffs tell you?
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