Chapter 14. Oligopoly



Similar documents
Oligopoly: Firms in Less Competitive Markets

ECON 202: Principles of Microeconomics. Chapter 13 Oligopoly

Economics Instructor Miller Oligopoly Practice Problems

ECON101 STUDY GUIDE 7 CHAPTER 14

Oligopoly: Firms in Less Competitive Markets

Oligopoly. Models of Oligopoly Behavior No single general model of oligopoly behavior exists. Oligopoly. Interdependence.

Chapter 16 Oligopoly What Is Oligopoly? 1) Describe the characteristics of an oligopoly.

Oligopoly. Oligopoly. Offer similar or identical products Interdependent. How people behave in strategic situations

chapter: Oligopoly Krugman/Wells Economics 2009 Worth Publishers 1 of 35

13 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION AND OLIGOPOLY. Chapter. Key Concepts

Econ 101: Principles of Microeconomics

T28 OLIGOPOLY 3/1/15

Extreme cases. In between cases

Oligopoly: How do firms behave when there are only a few competitors? These firms produce all or most of their industry s output.

Oligopoly and Game Theory

Oligopoly. Oligopoly is a market structure in which the number of sellers is small.

Price competition with homogenous products: The Bertrand duopoly model [Simultaneous move price setting duopoly]

LECTURE #15: MICROECONOMICS CHAPTER 17

12 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly

Market structures. 18. Oligopoly Gene Chang Univ. of Toledo. Examples. Oligopoly Market. Behavior of Oligopoly. Behavior of Oligopoly

CHAPTER 12 MARKETS WITH MARKET POWER Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 2 nd Edition

Oligopoly. Unit 4: Imperfect Competition. Unit 4: Imperfect Competition 4-4. Oligopolies FOUR MARKET MODELS

Microeconomics. Lecture Outline. Claudia Vogel. Winter Term 2009/2010. Part III Market Structure and Competitive Strategy

MODULE 64: INTRODUCTION TO OLIGOPOLY Schmidty School of Economics. Wednesday, December 4, :20:15 PM Central Standard Time

Oligopoly and Strategic Pricing

Imperfect Competition. Oligopoly. Types of Imperfectly Competitive Markets. Imperfect Competition. Markets With Only a Few Sellers

chapter: Solution Oligopoly 1. The accompanying table presents market share data for the U.S. breakfast cereal market

Market Structure: Duopoly and Oligopoly

Oligopoly and Strategic Behavior

Market Structure: Oligopoly (Imperfect Competition)

Figure: Computing Monopoly Profit

Oligopoly. Chapter 25

OLIGOPOLY. Nature of Oligopoly. What Causes Oligopoly?

4. Market Structures. Learning Objectives Market Structures

a. Retail market for water and sewerage services Answer: Monopolistic competition, many firms each selling differentiated products.

Models of Imperfect Competition

CHAPTER 11: MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION AND OLIGOPOLY

When other firms see these potential profits they will enter the industry, causing a downward shift in the demand for a given firm s product.

CHAPTER 18 MARKETS WITH MARKET POWER Principles of Economics in Context (Goodwin et al.)

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Week 7 - Game Theory and Industrial Organisation

Chapter 12 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly

Chapter 13: Strategic Decision Making in Oligopoly Markets

b. Cost of Any Action is measure in foregone opportunities c.,marginal costs and benefits in decision making

L10. Chapter 13 Oligopoly: Firms in Less Competitive Markets

Pre-Test Chapter 23 ed17

Variable Cost. Marginal Cost. Average Variable Cost 0 $50 $50 $ $150 A B C D E F 2 G H I $120 J K L 3 M N O P Q $120 R

Aggressive Advertisement. Normal Advertisement Aggressive Advertisement. Normal Advertisement

Rutgers University Economics 102: Introductory Microeconomics Professor Altshuler Fall 2003

Chapter 16 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly

CHAPTER 6 MARKET STRUCTURE

Games and Strategic Behavior. Chapter 9. Learning Objectives

5. Suppose demand is perfectly elastic, and the supply of the good in question

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Chapter 8 Production Technology and Costs 8.1 Economic Costs and Economic Profit

Chapter 7: Market Structures Section 3

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Industry profit in an oligopoly (sum of all firms profits) < monopoly profit.

OpenStax-CNX module: m Oligopoly. OpenStax College. Abstract. By the end of this section, you will be able to:

Chapter 7 Monopoly, Oligopoly and Strategy

Managerial Economics & Business Strategy Chapter 9. Basic Oligopoly Models

Chapter 11: Price-Searcher Markets with High Entry Barriers

Mikroekonomia B by Mikolaj Czajkowski. MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Study Guide Exam 3 Fall 2011

Chapter 9 Basic Oligopoly Models

Cooleconomics.com Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly. Contents:

AGEC 105 Spring 2016 Homework Consider a monopolist that faces the demand curve given in the following table.

Write down the names of three companies: competition. major competitors.

Economics 203: Intermediate Microeconomics I Lab Exercise #11. Buy Building Lease F1 = 500 F1 = 750 Firm 2 F2 = 500 F2 = 400

The Basics of Game Theory

Do not open this exam until told to do so.

Chapter 7: Market Structures Section 1

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

This hand-out gives an overview of the main market structures including perfect competition, monopoly, monopolistic competition, and oligopoly.

Econ 201 Final Exam. Douglas, Fall 2007 Version A Special Codes PLEDGE: I have neither given nor received unauthorized help on this exam.

INTRODUCTION OLIGOPOLY CHARACTERISTICS OF MARKET STRUCTURES DEGREES OF POWER DETERMINANTS OF MARKET POWER

Northern University Bangladesh

OLIGOPOLY IN THIS CHAPTER YOU WILL...

ECON 312: Oligopolisitic Competition 1. Industrial Organization Oligopolistic Competition

Chapter 13 Oligopoly 1

Lecture 28 Economics 181 International Trade

Common in European countries government runs telephone, water, electric companies.

Robert S. Pindyck. Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Chapter 7. Comparative Advantage and the Gains from International Trade

Economics Chapter 7 Market Structures. Perfect competition is a in which a large number of all produce.

BPE_MIC1 Microeconomics 1 Fall Semester 2011

Homework 3, Solutions Managerial Economics: Eco 685

Econ 101, section 3, F06 Schroeter Exam #4, Red. Choose the single best answer for each question.

As you move your cart down the grocery isle, stop in front of the canned soups. You see before maybe four or five different brands of soup.

If you go to a store to buy tennis balls, you will probably come home with. Oligopoly

I. Noncooperative Oligopoly

Eco 340 Industrial Economics Market Structures: Cartels / Cooperative Oligopoly. Prof Dr. Murat Yulek

Competition and Regulation. Lecture 2: Background on imperfect competition

0.0.2 Pareto Efficiency (Sec. 4, Ch. 1 of text)

The Economics of E-commerce and Technology. Industry Analysis

MobLab Game Catalog For Business Schools Fall, 2015

Cournot s model of oligopoly

5 Market Games For Teaching Economics

Transcription:

Chapter 14. Oligopoly Instructor: JINKOOK LEE Department of Economics / Texas A&M University ECON 202 504 Principles of Microeconomics

Oligopoly Market Oligopoly: A market structure in which a small number of interdependent firms compete. In analyzing oligopoly, we cannot rely on the same types of graphs we used before for two reasons. We need to use the more complex business strategies of large oligopoly firms. demand curves and cost curves are not useful. To analyze competition among oligopolists, we use game theory. game theory is the study of how people make decisions in situations in which attaining their goals depends on their interactions with others.

Barriers to Entry Barrier to entry: Anything that keeps new firms from entering an industry in which firms are earning economic profits. A. Economies of Scale: the situation when a firm long-run average costs fall as the firm increases output. The industry will be an oligopoly if the minimum point comes at a level of output that is a large fraction of industry sales, such as Q2.

Barriers to Entry B. Ownership of a Key Input: If production of a good requires a particular input, then control of that input can be a barrier to entry. De Beers controlled most of the world s diamond mines. Major airlines in U.S. are controlling most of arriving/departing gates at their hub airports. C. Government-Imposed Barriers Patent: the exclusive right to a product (for 20 years). Occupational licensing: doctors and dentists in every state need licenses to practice. Tariff: a tax on imports Quota: limit on the quantity of a good that can be imported into a country.

Game Theory Game theory: the study of the decisions of firms in industries where the profits of each firm depend on its interactions with other firms. Games share three key characteristics. Rules that determine what actions are allowable. Strategies that players employ to attain their objectives in the game. Payoffs that are the results of the interactions among the players strategies.

A Duopoly Game: Price Competition between Two Firms Game theory can be used to analyze price competition in a duopoly (an oligopoly with two firms). if they both charged $1,200, they would each make profits of $10 million. however, each firm has an incentive to undercut the other by charging a lower price. if both firms charged $1,000, they would each make a profit of only $7.5 million.

A Duopoly Game: Price Competition between Two Firms Payoff matrix: A table that shows the payoffs that each firm earns from every combination of strategies by the firms. Collusion: An agreement among firms to charge the same price or otherwise not to compete. Dominant strategy: A strategy that is the best for a firm, no matter what strategies other firms use. The result of a dominant strategy is an equilibrium in which each firm is maximizing profits, given the price chosen by the other firm. Nash equilibrium: A situation in which each firm chooses the best strategy, given the strategies chosen by other firms.

Firm Behavior and the Prisoner s Dilemma Cooperative equilibrium: An equilibrium in a game in which players cooperate to increase their mutual payoff. Noncooperative equilibrium: An equilibrium in a game in which players do not cooperate but pursue their own self-interest. Prisoner s dilemma: A game in which pursuing dominant strategies results in noncooperation that leaves everyone worse off.

Can Firms Escape the Prisoner s Dilemma? In this repeated game, firms have the incentive to cooperate by implicitly colluding. Suppose that Wal-Mart and Target sell PlaStation 3. each month they will decide what price they will charge for the PlayStation 3. they both are advertise that they will match the lowest price offered by competitor. the advertisement is one way of colluding implicitly. With the matching offer, the equilibrium shifts to both stores charging the high price and receiving high profits.

Real World Example of Lower Price Match

A Real World Example: OPEC Cartels Cartel: A group of firms that collude by agreeing to restrict output to increase prices and profits. OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) It has 12 members including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Nigeria, and others. They own 75% of the world s proven oil reserves. Cooperation: By reducing oil production, OPEC was able to raise the world price of oil in the mid-1970s and early 1980s. Noncooperation: Sustaining high prices has been difficult over the long run, because OPEC members often exceed their output quotas.

A Real World Example: OPEC Cartels Saudi Arabia can produce much more oil than Nigeria, its output decisions have a much larger effect on the price of oil. Low Output corresponds to cooperating with the OPEC-assigned quota. High Output corresponds to producing at maximum capacity. Saudi Arabia has a dominant strategy to cooperate (low output). Nigeria has a dominant strategy not to cooperate (high output). Equilibrium will occur with Saudi Arabia producing a low output and Nigeria producing a high output.

Deterring Entry Sequential games: one firm will act first, and then other firms will respond. Suppose that Apple has been successfully selling laptops, and Dell is considering whether it will enter the market or not. To break even, laptops must provide a minimum rate of return of 15 % on investment. What is the best decision for Apple?

Bargaining Suppose that Dell and TruImage begin bargaining over what price Dell will pay TruImage for its software. What is the best decision for Dell? TruImage threats Dell by telling that it will reject a $20 price. Is this threat credible? Subgame-perfect equilibrium: A Nash equilibrium in which no player can make himself or herself better off by changing his decision at any decision node.