Monopolistic Competition
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Transcript Monopolistic Competition
Chapter 17
Monopolistic
Competition and
Advertising
MODERN PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS
Third Edition
Outline
Sources of Product Differentiation
The Monopolistic Competition Model
The Economics of Advertising
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Introduction
Monopolistic competition combines some
features of competitive markets with some
features of monopoly.
Monopolistic competition is a market with:
• Many sellers.
• Free entry and exit.
• Product differentiation.
Monopolistic competitors face a downward
sloping demand curve.
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Definition
Monopolistic competition:
a market with a large number of firms
selling similar but not identical products.
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Product Differentiation
COSTI IOSIF/SHUTTERSTOCK
Can you tell the difference?
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Product Differentiation
COSTI IOSIF/SHUTTERSTOCK
How about now?
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Product Differentiation
Products can be differentiated along any
dimension that people care about, such as
taste, style, features, or location.
Differentiated products are often highly
advertised.
Firms want consumers to perceive their
products as different and better because that
increases their market power.
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Self-Check
Under monopolistic competition, there are/is:
a. Many firms.
b. A few firms.
c. One firm.
Answer: a – under monopolistic competition,
there are many firms.
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Monopolistic Competition
Price
Short Run
In the short run, a monopolistic
competitor can make profits like
a monopolist.
MC
P
Profit
AC
Demand
Q
MR
Quantity
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Monopolistic Competition
Price
Firms enter → ↓market share
The firm produces QLR and
Demand curve shifts left
makes zero profits but P > MC.
Entry continues until P = AC
Long Run
MC
P
AC
MR
Q LR
Demand
Quantity
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Monopolistic Competition
Price
Long Run
The firm produces QLR and
makes zero profits but P > MC.
MC
P
AC
MR
Q LR
Demand
Quantity
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Monopolistic Competition
A monopolistically competitive firm can reduce
output and raise the price without losing all of
its customers.
Product differentiation means the firm is able to
charge P > MC.
It also means that a firm does not produce at
the minimum of its AC curve.
In the longer run, consumers are better off
because of new features and products.
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Monopolistic Competition
Price
Monopolistic
Competition
Price
P = AC
Profits = 0
MC
AC
PC
PMC
Competition
P = AC, Profits = 0
Minimum AC
MC
AC
P = MR
Demand
Quantity
QMC
QC
Quantity
MR
Comparing Monopolistic competition and Competition.
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Self-Check
Firms in which of the following markets will
produce at the minimum AC:
a. Monopoly.
b. Monopolistic competition.
c. Competition.
Answer: c – a competitive firm will produce at
the minimum average cost.
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Economics of Advertising
Monopolies, oligopolies, and monopolistically
competitive firms use advertising to differentiate
their products and build brand identity.
Informative advertising is about price, quality,
and availability.
Persuasive advertising is about changing
people’s minds and moving the market towards
monopoly.
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Economics of Advertising
There is evidence that advertising lowers prices
and improves consumer welfare.
Advertising can also signal that the seller
expects the product to be a success.
Persuasion can give us tastes that appear silly
or unjustified.
Persuasion also can deepen our enjoyments
and our memories.
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Economics of Advertising
In a blind taste test,
subjects were given
labeled and unlabeled
glasses of Coke.
They reported greater
enjoyment from drinking
the labeled Coke.
Brain scans showed
activity in the memory
regions of the brain.
INTERFOTO/ALAMY
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Economics of Advertising
Persuasive advertising can create market
power by brand differentiation.
Advertising helps people enjoy a lot of products.
Ads make Google search, newspapers, and
cable TV cheaper.
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Takeaway
A monopolistically competitive industry has many
sellers, free entry, and differentiated products.
Each firm retains a downward-sloped demand
curve and Price remains above MC.
Free entry drives price down to P = MC, where
economic profits = 0.
Firms do not produce at the minimum AC.
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Takeaway
Advertising can inform consumers about price,
quality, and availability.
Advertising can also increase perceptions of
product differentiation, which allows firms to
increase prices.
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