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Monopolistic Competition
(Chamberlin Model)
Free entry, many firms sell (physically
or perceivably) differentiated products.
Firms ignore competitors. Each redefines
market to a segment (consumers preferences)
& estimates its own downward demand d.
Other brands make firms demand d more
elastic (for segment only) than market share
curve M (for entire market). Firms market
power limited, but still allows P > MC.
In short run firm may move along d, but
eventually similar conditions lead to similar
P: each firm operates at d & M intersection.
Equilibrium when firms re-estimated
d intersects M where SMC = MR.
The Bad
(for Society):
P*
P > MC =>
P1 = AC1
Inefficiencies
AC*
& Misallocations
The Ugly
(for Managers):
Free Entry drives
Long Run Profit
to Normal = 0
MC
AC
Entry
MR
Transitory
Total Profit
Q1 Q*
MR1
D1
Quantity of Brand
X
Oligopoly
Few sellers (< 10, 2 in duopoly) of homogeneous or differentiated product actively competing for
market share.
Barriers to entry:
Entry limiting pricing P < P* and Market saturation: discourage entry
Fed Trade Commission antitrust against General Mills, General Foods
& Kellogg for proliferation of brands (fill shelves & prevent entry)
Capital requirements
Product differentiation, hard for entrant to attract customers
Strategic Interaction
What you do affects the profits of your rivals
What your rival does affects your profits
Strategic Interdependence
Firm is not in
complete control
of its own destiny.
Change in firms
quantity demanded
depends on whether
rivals match firms
change in price!
PH
P0
PL
Q0
D1 (Rivals hold
their price
constant)
Q
Sweezy (Kinked
Demand) Model
Few firms in the market
(entry barriers) produce
differentiated products.
Each firm believes rivals
match price reductions,
but not price increases.
Key feature: Price-Rigidity
( cost firms operate at kink)
With econ wide increase
in production costs, firm
might profitable increase
price, regardless of others.
When others follow adjust
d upward to new kink Q3,P2
M = DMarket
MCH
MC
MCL
PK
MRM
d = DFirm
MRd
QK
MR
D
Q
<
Q* = 3300
Cournot Duopoly
Two firms produce homogenous product in an
industry with barriers to entry
Firms maximize profit by setting output, as
opposed to price
Each firm wrongly believes their rival will hold
output constant if it changes its own output
Firms reaction (or best-response) function: profit
maximizing amount of output for each quantity of
output produced by rival
50
Cournot Equilibrium
Each firm produces the profit maximizing output, given the output of rival firms
No firm gains by unilateral changes in its output
Assume:
P = 950 - (Q1 + Q2) and MC = 50
P = a - b(Q1 + Q2) and MCi = Ci
Simultaneously
solved:
Cournot Equilibrium
Q1* maximizes firm 1s profits, given that firm 2 produces Q2*
Q2* maximizes firm 2s profits, given that firm 1 produces Q1*
No firm has an incentive to change output, given rivals output
Beliefs are consistent:
In equilibrium, each
firm thinks rival
will stick to current
output - and they do!
Q2
r1 (Firm 1s Reaction Function)
Q2
Cournot Equilibrium
Q2 *
r2
Q1
Q1M
Q1
Chamberlin Duopoly
Chamberlin applied results from his analysis of monopolistic
competition on oligopoly
Cournot, Bertrand and Edgeworth models assume that
competitors are extremely nave
Chamberlin argued that oligopolists would recognize their
mutual or strategic interdependence and engage in tacit or
informal collusion: independently choose monopoly price and
split profits
Managers signal to competitors their desire not to engage
in destructive price war by setting price
Agreements are not necessary because firms realize any other
strategy is less profitable
Formal Collusive agreements are illegal, although U. S. firms
have been permitted to agree on export pricing
Contestable Markets
Few sellers but free entry: Oligopoly will price at a
perfect competition level & have only normal = 0
Key Assumptions
Producers have access to same technology
Consumers respond quickly to price changes
Existing firms cannot respond quickly to entry by
lowering price
Absence of sunk costs
Key Implications
Threat of entry disciplines firms already in the market
Incumbents have no market power, even if there is only a
single incumbent (a monopolist)
Summary
Different oligopoly scenarios lead to different
optimal strategies and different outcomes
Your optimal price and output depends on
Beliefs about the reactions of rivals
Your choice variable (P or Q) and the nature of the
product market (differentiated or homogeneous
products)
Your ability to commit