Market Structures
Market Structures
Market Structures
School
• PERFECT COMPETITION
• MONOPOLY
• MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
• OLIGOPOLY
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Perfect competition
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Perfect competition
Characteristics of a perfectly competition marke
SAC
P P
D = MR = AR
q Q Output
Output
rket price is set at industry level at the intersection of
mand and supply
the industry supply curve is the sum of the individual fir
supply curves .
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The firm and the industry in School
P P
D = MR = AR
q Q Output
Output
The firm accepts price as given at P
SAC SRSS 1
P P
D = MR = AR P1
D
q Q Output
Output
At this price , profits are shown by the shaded area .
These profits attract new entrants into the industry .
As more firms join the market , the industry supply curve shif
to the right , and market price falls . 9
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Long-run equilibrium
Firm INDUSTRY
SMC
RS RS
SAC SRSS
P* LRSS
P*
D = MR = AR
D
q* Output Q Output
The market settles in long - run equilibrium when the typical
firm just makes normal profit by setting LMC = MR at the minimu
point of LAC . Long - run industry supply is horizontal .
If the expansion of the industry pushes up input prices ( e . g . wages )
then the long - run supply curve will not be horizontal , but upward - slopi
10
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MONOPOLY
FEATURES
• Single seller of a product which has no
close substitute
• A monopoly firm is a price maker, not a
price taker
• Barriers to entry
• The demand curve is downward sloping
• Can adjust the price by adjusting its
output level
• Monopolies do not last for long
SOURCES AND KINDS Amity Business
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DEMAND CURVE
Higher output causes
a
Pric
Quantit
y
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PROFIT MAXIMIZATION
REVENUE AND COST
P1 P
P2
M
O Q
QUANTITY
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MISCONCEPTIONS
• A monopoly firm necessarily makes
super normal profits
•
• Demand curve faced by a monopoly
firm is perfectly inelastic so that it
can charge any price it likes
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PRICE DISCRIMINATION
• When the same product is sold at different
prices to different customers on the basis
of their incomes or purchasing powers,
geographical location, age, sex, quantity
they purchase, their association with the
seller, etc, is called Price Discrimination
•
• When a monopolist sells the same product
at different prices to different buyers, the
monopoly is called a Discriminatory
Monopoly
•
MEASURES OF MONOPOLY
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POWER School
POWER School
• Number-of-firms Criterion
•
• Concentration Ratio
•
• Excess Profitability Criteria
•
• Triffin’s Cross-Elasticity Criterion
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MONOPOLISTIC
COMPETITION
WHAT IS MONOPOLISTIC
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COMPETITION? School
CHARACTERISTICS
• Some Additional Characteristic of
Monopolistic Competition (which
are same as under perfect
competition)
• Goal of profit maximization
• Perfect knowledge
• The prices of factors of production
and technology are given
• Decision taken in one period do not
affect future periods and are not
affected by past decisions
EXAMPLE Amity Business
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•
• SOAP INDUSTRY
CONCEPT OF PRODUCT Amity
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• SYMMETRY assumption
EQUILIBRIUM
SHORT- RUN EQUILIBRIUM Amity Business
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=OPeQ-OCBQ
=CPeB
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LONG – RUN School
EQUILIBRIUM
J
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LONG-RUN EQUILIBRIUM
• The firm earns just normal profits,
as total revenue is equal to total
cost.
=OPJQ-OPJQ
=NIL
OLIGOPOLY
Oligopoly is defined as a market
organisation in which there are a few
sellers of a homogeneous or
differentiated products.
If there are two sellers in the
economy then it is duopoly.
Examples Amity Business
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• Duopoly:
• The most popular example of duopoly is
between Visa and Mastercardwho
exercise a major control over the
electronic payment processing market
in the world.
• Airbus and Boeing are duopolies in
the commercial jet aircraft market.
•
Examples Amity Business
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• Oligopoly:
• Aviation industry
• Soft drink industry
Types of oligopoly Amity Business
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indeterminate. School
Oligopoly School
• Cournot’s model
• Stackelberg’s model
• Sweezy’s ‘kinked-
demandcurve’ model
Cournot’s Model Amity Business
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• Assumptions
• There are two firms
selling
homogeneous
product.
• They sell their
goods in the
market with
straight line
demand curves
• Each firm in order
to maximise total
Cournot’s Model
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Stackelberg’s Model Amity Business
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– Assumptions
• There are two firms
selling
homogeneous
product under
zero cost of
production.
• They sell their
goods in the
market with
straight line
demand curves.
• One firm sets the
Stackelberg’s Model
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Sweezy’s ‘kinked-demand’
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Model School
– Assumptions
• Oligopolist
recognise their
mutual
dependence but
act without
collusion.
• Oligopolist will
match price
decrease and not
price increase.
Sweezy’s ‘kinked-demand’
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Model School
CARTEL Amity Business
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MC1
AC2 P
MC2
COST & REVENUE
C1 C2
C
AR=D
MR
O Q1 O Q2 O Q
OPEC (A CARTEL) Amity Business
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•
•
The Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC) is a cartel of twelve countries
made up of Algeria , Angola,
Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya,
Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the
United Arab Emirates, and
Venezuela.
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O P E C p u rsu e s w a ys a n d m e a n s o f
e n su rin g th e sta b iliza tio n o f p rice s in
in te rn a tio n a lo ilm a rke t w ith a vie w
to e lim in a tin g h a rm fu la n d
u n n e ce ssa ry flu ctu a tio n s.
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PRISONERS’ DILEMMA
B’s OPTIONS
CONFESS DENY
CONFES A A
S B B
5 2
A’s 5 10
OPTIONS
DENY A A
B B
10 2 0
0
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R E LE V A N C E IN
•OThe
LIGprisoners’
O P O LYdilemma illustrates
the nature of problems oligopoly
firms are confronted with in the
formulation of their business
strategy with respect to such
problems as strategic advertising ,
price cutting, etc.
•
• To find a reasonable answer ,the firm
PRICE LEADERSHIP MODELS Amity Business
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MC2
H AC2
P3
P2 L MC1
AC1
P1 J
AR
COST & REV
MR
Q1 Q2 OUTPUT
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PRICE LEADERSHIP (BY DOMINANT
FIRM)
a) b)
D S
COST
PRICE &
PRICE
E
P3 MC
P3
A B P’
P’ P
C F P2
P2
P1
P1 D
D
O OUTPUT Q MR
O OUTPUT
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THANK YOU