Strategic Pricing AEM 4160
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Transcript Strategic Pricing AEM 4160
Lecture 3: MARKET STRUCTURE AND
PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION
AEM 4160: Strategic Pricing
Prof. Jura Liaukonyte
1
Lecture Plan
1
Other
Elasticities
2
Market
Concentration
3
Product
Differentiation
4
Price
Discrimination
Income Elasticity
Cross Price Elasticity
Price Elasticity of Supply
What does it mean
How to measure
Why do we care?
HHI, CR4-Ratio, Lerner Index
Differentiation and market structure
Implications for pricing
First Degree PD
Second Degree PD
Poll Everywhere
At the beginning of each lecture you will be presented with a keyword.
To sign-in for the day, text:
Today’s keyword is BACKPACK
Keyword netID to 37607
don’t forget the space between the keyword and netID
Keyword is not case sensitive.
Or, you can sign in via a web browser at PollEv.com/dyson:
Just enter your netid
For today:
Text to 37607:
BACKPACK jl2545
Go online to:
PollEv.com/dyson
or
jl2545
Other Demand Elasticities
Income Elasticity of Demand
Measures how much quantity demanded changes with a change
in income
EI
Q/Q
I/I
I Q
Q I
Values for Income Elasticity (EI)
Sign indicates normal or inferior.
EI >0 implies normal good.
EI <0 implies inferior good.
Normal goods may be necessity or luxury.
Other Demand Elasticities
Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand
Measures the percentage change in the quantity
demanded of one good that results from a one percent
change in the price of another good
E Q b Pm
Qb Qb
Pm Pm
Pm Q b
Q b Pm
Other Demand Elasticities
Complements: Cars and Tires
Cross-price elasticity of demand is negative
Price of cars increases, quantity demanded of tires decreases
Substitutes: Butter and Margarine
Cross-price elasticity of demand is positive
Price of butter increases, quantity of margarine demanded increases
Illustration: Cross Price Elasticity
Two Complements
Price of Product X
Price of Product A
Two Substitutes
Demand for Product B
Demand for Product Y
Size of shift in Demand
Assume Psubst Increases
EXY>1
Price
Price
EXY<1
D
D’
Demand for Product
D D’
Demand for Product
Example: The Cross-Price Elasticity of
Demand for Cars
Sentra Escort LS400 735i
Sentra -6.528 0.454
0.000
0.000
Escort 0.078
-6.031 0.001
0.000
LS400 0.000
0.001
-3.085 0.032
735i
0.001
0.093
0.000
-3.515
Source: Berry, Levinsohn and Pakes, "Automobile Price in
Market Equilibrium," Econometrica 63 (July 1995), 841-890.
Price Elasticity of Supply
Definition
Measures the sensitivity of
quantity supplied given a change
in price
Measures the percentage
change in quantity supplied
resulting from a 1 percent
change in price
Formula
E
S
P
% Q S
% P
Profit Maximization: MR=MC
Set Up
profit(q)
How
Optimization
= TR(q) – TC(q)
to maximize profit?
Profit Maximization: MR=MC
profit(q)
Set Up
Optimization
= TR(q) – TC(q)
Profit maximization: dprofit/dq = 0
This implies dTR(q)/dq - dTC(q)/dq = 0
But dTR(q)/dq = marginal revenue
dTC(q)/dq = marginal cost
So profit maximization implies MR = MC
Profit Maximization: Monopoly Condition
Derivation of the monopolist’s marginal revenue
$/unit
1. Demand: P = A – B*Q
2. Total Revenue: TR = P*Q = A*Q – B*Q2
3. Marginal Revenue: MR = dTR/dQ
4. MR= A-2B*Q
A
Demand
With linear demand the marginal
revenue curve is also linear with
the same price intercept
…
but twice the slope
Quantity
MR
2
Market Concentration
Different Market
Structures
Measurements of
market structures
Numbers and size distributions of firms
1.
2.
3.
Ready-to-eat breakfast cereals: high concentration
Newspapers: low concentration
Concentration ratio,
Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI)
Lerner Index (LI)
Industry Concentration
Four-Firm Concentration Ratio
The sum of the market shares of the top four firms in the defined
industry. Letting Si denote sales for firm i and ST denote total industry
sales
C 4 w1 w 2 w 3 w 4 , where w1
Si
ST
Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI)
The sum of the squared market shares of firms in a given industry,
multiplied by 10,000: HHI = 10,000 S wi2, where wi = Si/ST.
HHI
The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index – the square of the percentage
market share of each firm summed over the largest 50 firms in the
industry (or all of the firms if there is less than 50)
Definition
Properties
In perfect competition, the HHI is small
In monopoly, the HHI is 10,000 (100 squared)
A popular measure with the Justice Dept in the 1980’s
Example
HHI < 1000 characterized competitive markets
HHI > 1800 would bring Justice Dept challenge to proposed
mergers
E.g. The cigarette industry is highly concentrated with only 8 firms
and a Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) of 2623
Measure of concentration
Firm Rank
Squared Market
Share
1
25
625
2
25
625
3
25
625
4
5
25
5
5
25
6
5
25
7
5
25
8
5
25
Concentration Index
18
Market Share
(%)
Measure of concentration
Market Share
(%)
Firm Rank
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Concentration Index
19
Σ
25
25
25
5
5
5
5
5
CR4 = 80
Squared Market
Share
Σ
625
625
625
25
25
25
25
25
H = 2,000
Measure of concentration
Market Share
(%)
Firm Rank
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Assume firms 4
and 5 merge
Concentration Index
20
25
25
25
5
5
5
5
5
Squared Market
Share
625
625
625
25
25
25
25
25
Measure of concentration
Market Share
(%)
Firm Rank
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Σ
Assume firms 4
and 5 merge
Concentration Index
21
25
25
25
5
5
5
5
5
10
Squared Market
Share
Σ
625
625
625
25
25
25
25
25
100
Measure of concentration
Market Share
(%)
Firm Rank
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Σ
The concentration
indices change
Concentration Index
22
25
25
25
5
5
5
5
5
10
CR4 = 80 85
Squared Market
Share
Σ
625
625
625
25
25
25
25
25
100
H = 2,000 2050
Example: Candy and Chocolate
Industry
Candy v. Chocolate
CANDY
1.00%
Mars Incorporated
HHI (for top 4) = 1141
CR ₄ = 59%
Medium level concentration
->Concentration is increasing
The Hershey Company
1.00%
2.00%
Tootsie Roll Industries
2.00%
2.50%
13.40%
3.00%
4.00%
49.50%
21.60%
Ferrara Pan Candy
Company
1,039 businesses overall!
Jelly Belly Candy
Company
Russell Stover Candies Inc.
Kraft Foods
CHOCOLATE
Nestle Inc.
HHI (for top 4)= 2941.81
Cr ₄ = 78.1%
High level of concentration
Mars Incorporated
The Topps Company
Other
The Hershey Company
25.00%
39.00%
Russel Stover
20.00%
10.00%
518 Businesses overall!
0.50%
0.50%
Nestle
Lindt & Sprungli
Guittard Chocolate
Company
See's Candies
4.00%
1.00%
Other
CR₄ and HHI: Candy Industry
The HHI for just the top 4 companies in the industry is
2941.81.
The CR ₄ for the industry is 78.1%.
Therefore, the industry is highly concentrated with only a
few major firms holding a majority of the market share.
CR ₄ = 49.5 + 21.6 + 4 + 3= 78.1%
*Hershey and Mars Inc. alone hold 71.1% of the market share.
-Note that students calculated HHI incorrectly (need to add
squared market shares for top 50 companies, not only top 4)
Example: Credit Card
Industry
Market Definition
All Credit Lending Institutions with their own card
27.2%
19.2%
18.9%
17.2%
4.0%
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.
Bank of America Corporation
Citigroup Inc.
American Express Company
Capital One
CR4: 83.2
HHI: 1810-1850
Total Number of Companies: 192
MARKET SHARE
J.P. Morgan Chase
Bank of America Corporation
Citigroup Inc.
American Express Company
Capital One
5%
20%
31%
22%
22%
What is a Market?
No clear consensus
the market for automobiles
the market for soft drinks
what are the competitors for Coca Cola and Pepsi?
With whom do McDonalds and Burger King compete?
Presumably define a market by closeness in substitutability of the
commodities involved
how close is close?
how homogeneous do commodities have to be?
should we include light trucks; pick-ups SUVs?
Fast-Food Outlets
McDonald’s
Burger
King
Wendy’s
Market Performance
Market structure is often a guide to market performance
But this is not a perfect measure
Can have near competitive prices even with “few” firms
Measure market performance using the Lerner Index
LI =
P-MC
P
Lerner Index
Lerner Index:
L = (p - MC)/p = 1/|EP|
The higher the number, the more pricing power the firm has.
Mark-up power reflects monopoly power.
PUNCHLINE: If elasticity increases, mark-up will
decline. If the product becomes less elastic, markup will increase.
What are Sources of Monopoly Power?
• Low elasticity of demand
• We just showed this using Lerner Index.
• Possibly due to strong product differentiation.
• High barriers to entry
• e.g., ownership of necessary raw materials, patents and regulatory
barriers, scale economies, product diff.
• Number of other competitors in market.
• Interactions between firms: Compete or cooperate?
Product Differentiation
Products are different if there is some objective characteristic
or property, real or perceived, that provides a basis for buyers
to choose one over the other.
Product differentiation may lead to reduced own -price
elasticity. As the degree of differentiation increases, the price
elasticity will decrease.
Product Differentiation, cont.
Ways in which products are differentiated.
Product Brand
Packaging
Conditions of Sale
Service Provided
Location
Product Differentiation as an Entry Strategy
Product differentiation to create a niche market.
Product differentiation to deter entry.
Product Positions in Characteristics Space