Pricing Strategies For Firms With Market Power: Mcgraw-Hill/Irwin
Pricing Strategies For Firms With Market Power: Mcgraw-Hill/Irwin
Pricing Strategies For Firms With Market Power: Mcgraw-Hill/Irwin
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Overview
I. Basic Pricing Strategies
Monopoly & Monopolistic Competition Cournot Oligopoly
Transfer Pricing
Randomized Pricing
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Quantity
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Caveats:
In practice, transactions costs and information constraints make this difficult to implement perfectly (but car dealers and some professionals come close). Price discrimination wont work if consumers can resell the good.
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$5
D 2 4 Quantity
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An Example
Suppose the elasticity of demand for Kodak film in the US is EU = -1.5, and the elasticity of demand in Japan is EJ = -2.5. Marginal cost of manufacturing film is $3. PU = [EU/(1+ EU)] MC = [-1.5/(1 - 1.5)] $3 = $9 PJ = [EJ/(1+ EJ)] MC = [-2.5/(1 - 2.5)] $3 = $5 Kodaks optimal third-degree pricing strategy is to charge a higher price in the US, where demand is less elastic.
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Two-Part Pricing
When it isnt feasible to charge different prices for different units sold, but demand information is known, two-part pricing may permit you to extract all surplus from consumers. Two-part pricing consists of a fixed fee and a per unit charge.
Example: Athletic club memberships.
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10 8 6
Per Unit Charge
2
D 1 2 3 4 5
MC
Quantity
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Block Pricing
The practice of packaging multiple units of an identical product together and selling them as one package. Examples
Paper. Six-packs of soda. Different sized of cans of green beans.
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An Algebraic Example
Typical consumers demand is P = 10 - 2Q C(Q) = 2Q Optimal number of units in a package? Optimal package price?
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4 2
D 1 2 3 4 5 Quantity
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MC = AC
4 2
D 1 2 3 4 5 Quantity
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MC = AC
4 2
D
* Assuming no fixed costs
Costs = (2)(4) = $8
MC = AC Quantity
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Commodity Bundling
The practice of bundling two or more products together and charging one price for the bundle. Examples
Vacation packages. Computers and software. Film and developing.
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Zero costs (for simplicity). Maximum price each type of consumer will pay is as follows:
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Reservation (Maximum) Prices for Kodak Film and Developing by Type of Consumer
Type F FD D N Film Developing $8 $3 $8 $4 $4 $6 $3 $2
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Optimal Price is $8; only types F and FD buy resulting in profits of $8 x 2 million = $16 Million.
At a price of $4, only types F, FD, and D will buy (profits of $12 Million).
At a price of $3, all types will buy (profits of $12 Million).
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At a price of $6, only D type buys (profits of $6 Million). At a price of $4, only D and FD types buy (profits of $8 Million). At a price of $2, all types buy (profits of $8 Million). Optimal Price is $3, to earn profits of $3 x 3 million = $9 Million.
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Total Profit = Film Profits + Development Profits = $16 Million + $9 Million = $25 Million Surprisingly, the firm can earn even greater profits by bundling!
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Peak-Load Pricing
Price When demand during peak times is higher than the capacity of the firm, the firm should engage in PH peak-load pricing. Charge a higher price PL (PH) during peak times (DH). Charge a lower price (PL) during off-peak times (DL).
MC
DH MRH
MRL QL
DL QH Quantity
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Cross-Subsidies
Prices charged for one product are subsidized by the sale of another product. May be profitable when there are significant demand complementarities effects. Examples
Browser and server software. Drinks and meals at restaurants.
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Double Marginalization
Consider a large firm with two divisions:
the upstream division is the sole provider of a key input. the downstream division uses the input produced by the upstream division to produce the final output.
Incentives to maximize divisional profits leads the upstream manager to produce where MRU = MCU.
Similarly, when the downstream division has market power and has an incentive to maximize divisional profits, the manager will produce where MRD = MCD. Thus, both divisions mark price up over marginal cost resulting in in a phenomenon called double marginalization.
Result: less than optimal overall profits for the firm.
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Transfer Pricing
To overcome double marginalization, the internal price at which an upstream division sells inputs to a downstream division should be set in order to maximize the overall firm profits. To achieve this goal, the upstream division produces such that its marginal cost, MCu, equals the net marginal revenue to the downstream division (NMRd): NMRd = MRd - MCd = MCu
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Analysis
This pricing strategy by the upstream division results in less than optimal profits! The upstream division needs the price to be $6 and the quantity sold to be 2 units in order to maximize profits. Unfortunately, The downstream division sets price at $8, which is too high; only 1 unit is sold at that price.
Downstream division profits are $8 1 6(1) = $2.
The upstream divisions profits are $6 1 - 2(1) = $4 instead of the monopoly profits of $6 2 - 2(2) = $8. Overall firm profit is $4 + $2 = $6.
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6
4 2
P = 10 - 2Q MC = AC
Quantity
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MR = 10 - 4Q
6
4 2
P = 10 - 2Q MC = AC
MR = 10 - 4Q
Quantity
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$6 2 $2 2 $8
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Randomized Pricing
A strategy of constantly changing prices. Decreases consumers incentive to shop around as they cannot learn from experience which firm charges the lowest price. Reduces the ability of rival firms to undercut a firms prices.
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Conclusion
First degree price discrimination, block pricing, and two part pricing permit a firm to extract all consumer surplus. Commodity bundling, second-degree and third degree price discrimination permit a firm to extract some (but not all) consumer surplus. Simple markup rules are the easiest to implement, but leave consumers with the most surplus and may result in double-marginalization. Different strategies require different information.
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