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Costs, Competition &
Organization of the
Business Firm
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Utility
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Utility
• Utility
• Satisfaction or pleasure derived from
consuming a good or service.
• Law of Diminishing Utility
• Added satisfaction declines as
additional units are used or consumed
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Substitution Effect
• Effect of a change in price on the
relative utility of a product and the
quantity demanded.
• MUA/PA = MUB/PB
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Prospect Theory
• Behavioral analysis of negative
occurrences.
• Factors
• Status quo
• Loss Aversion
• Market applications
• Package sizing
• Framing
• Anchoring
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Types of Business
Structures
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Three Types of Business Firms
• Proprietorship:
• owned by a single individual
• make up 72% of the firms in the market, but
account for only 4% of total business revenue
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Three Types of Business Firms
• Partnership:
• owned by two or more persons
• 8% of the firms; 12% of business
revenues
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Three Types of Business Firms
• Corporation:
• owned by stockholders
• In contrast to the unlimited liability of
proprietorships and partnerships, the
owners’ liability is limited to their
explicit investment.
• 20% of the firms; 84% of business
revenue
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The Economic Way
of Thinking about Costs
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Implicit & Explicit Costs
• Explicit
• Monetary Payments
• Accounting Profits
• Implicit
• Opportunity Costs
• Economic Profits
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Sunk Costs
• Sunk Costs are historical costs associated
with past decisions that can’t be changed.
• Sunk costs may provide information, but are
not relevant to current choices.
• Current choices should be made on current
and expected future costs and benefits.
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Economies of Scale
• As output (plant size) is increased, per-unit
costs will follow one of three possibilities:
• Economies of Scale:
Reductions in per unit costs as output
expands. This can occur for three reasons:
• mass production
• specialization
• improvements in production
as a result of experience
• Diseconomies of Scale:
increases in per unit costs as output expands
• Constant Returns to Scale:
unit costs are constant as output expands
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Short-Run and Long-Run
Time Periods
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The Short Run
• The short run is a period of time so short
that the firm’s level of plant and heavy
equipment (capital) is fixed.
• In the short run, output can only be altered
by changing the usage of variable resources
such as labor and raw materials.
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The Long Run
• The long run is a period of time sufficient
for the firm to alter all factors of production.
• In the long run, firms can freely enter and
exit the industry.
• The time duration of the short run and the
long run will differ across industries.
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Categories of Cost
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Fixed & Variable Costs
• Fixed Costs :
costs that remain unchanged regardless
on the amount produced.
• EG – Rent or the purchase of
machinery.
• Variable Costs:
Fixed costs depend on the amount
produced.
• EG – Electricity to run a machine or
inputs for production
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Total and Average Fixed Costs
• Total Fixed Costs (TFC):
costs that remain unchanged in the short run
when output is altered
• Examples:
• insurance premiums
• property taxes
• the opportunity cost of fixed assets
• Average Fixed Costs (AFC):
Fixed costs per unit (i.e. FC / output).
• decline as output expands
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Total and Average Variable Costs
• Total Variable Costs (TVC):
sum of costs that increase as output expands
• Examples:
• cost of labor
• raw materials
• Average Variable Costs (AVC):
variable costs per unit (i.e. TVC / output)
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Total Cost
• Total Costs (TC):
Total Fixed Cost + Total Variable Cost
• TC=FC+VC
• Average Total Costs (ATC):
Average Fixed Cost + Average Variable Cost
• ATC=AVC+AFC
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Marginal Cost
• Marginal Cost (MC):
the increase in Total Cost associated with
a one-unit increase in production
• Typically, MC will decline initially,
reach a minimum, and then rise.
• MC = (Change in TC)/(Change in Q)
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Revenues
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Revenues
• TR = Total Revenue
• AR = Average Revenue
• AR = TR / Q
• Marginal Revenue is the added revenue
associated with an increase of one unit of
output
• MR = TRN – TRN-1
• MR = ∆TR / ∆Q
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Profits & Equilibrium
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Profits & Equilibrium
• Profits
• Π = TR – TC
• Π = (P – ATC) * Q
• Equilibrium Pricing
• MC = MR
• Shut-down price
• P < AVCMIN
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Cost and Supply
• When making output decisions in the short
run, it is the firm’s marginal costs that are
most important.
• Additional units will not be supplied if they
do not generate additional revenues that are
sufficient to cover their marginal costs.
• For long-run output decisions, it is the firm’s
average total costs that are most important.
• Firms will not continue to supply output in
the long run if revenues are insufficient to
cover their average total costs.
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Short-Run Cost Curves
P
• Marginal Costs:
rise sharply as the plant’s
production capacity (q) is
approached.
MC
q Q
P
ATC
• Average Total Costs:
will be a U-shaped curve since
AFC will be high for small rates
of output and MC will be high
as the plant’s production
capacity (q) is approached.
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q Q
Output and Costs
In the Short Run
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Total Cost Schedule
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Output
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
TFC
50
50
50
50
50
50
50
50
50
50
50
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TVC
0
15
25
34
42
52
64
79
98
122
152
TC
50
65
75
84
92
102
114
129
148
172
202
Short Run Total Cost Curves
• Note that total fixed costs are flat
Total
– they are constant at all output levels.
costs
• Note that total variable costs increase as
more variable inputs are utilized.
200
• As total costs are the combination of
TVC and TFC, they are everywhere
positive and increase sharply with output
TC
TVC
150
Output
per day
0
2
4
6
8
10
TFC + TVC = TC
50
50
50
50
50
50
0
25
42
64
98
152
50
75
92
114
148
202
100
TFC
50
2
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4
6
8
10
Output
Average Cost Schedule
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Output
AFC
=(TFC/Output)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
50
25
16.7
12.5
10
8.3
7.1
6.25
5.6
5
AVC
=(TVC/Output)
15
12.5
11.3
10.5
10.4
10.7
11.3
12.25
13.6
15.2
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ATC
=(TC/Output)
65
37.5
28
23
20.4
19
18.4
18.5
19.2
20.2
Short Run Cost Curves
• The average variable cost curve (AVC)
is the total variable cost (TVC) divided
Cost
by the output level. It is higher either
per unit
for a few or a lot of units and has some
minimal point between the two where,
when graphed later, marginal costs (MC) 60
will cross.
TVC
0
15
25
42
64
98
152
/
Output
per day
0
1
2
4
6
8
10
= AVC
---$ 15.00
$ 12.50
$ 10.50
$ 10.67
$ 12.25
$ 15.20
40
AVC
20
AFC
Output
2
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4
6
8
10
Marginal Cost Schedule
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Output
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
VC
0
15
25
34
42
52
64
79
98
122
152
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∆VC=MC
=15-0
=25-15
=34-25
=42-34
=52-42
=64-52
=79-64
=98-79
=122-98
=152-122
15
10
9
8
10
12
15
19
24
30
Short Run Cost Curves
Short-Run
• To calculate the marginal cost curve
(MC) we take the change in TC (TC)
and divide that by the change in output.
Note: our increments for increasing
output here are 1 (
1).
• Note that MC starts low and increases
as output increases. It also crosses AVC
at its minimum point.
TC
50
65
75
84
92
102
114
129
148
172
202
TC Output MC
=
/
15
10
1
1
Cost
per unit
60
MC
Note: MC always crosses
AVC at its minimum point.
40
$ 15.00
$ 10.00
AVC
20
8
1
$ 8.00
12
1
$ 12.00
AFC
19
1
$ 19.00
Output
30
1
$ 30.00
2
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4
6
8
10
Short Run Cost Curves
• The average total cost curve (ATC)
is simply TC divided by the output.
• When output is low, ATC is high
because AFC is high. Also, ATC is
high when output is large as MC
grows large when output is high.
• These two relationships explain the
distinct U–shape of the ATC curve.
TC
50
65
75
92
114
148
202
/
Output
per day
0
1
2
4
6
8
10
= ATC
---$ 65.00
$ 37.50
$ 23.00
$ 19.00
$ 18.50
$ 20.20
Cost
per unit
60
MC
Note: MC always crosses
ATC at its minimum point.
40
ATC
20
AVC
AFC
Output
2
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4
6
8
10
Marginal Revenue
• Marginal Revenue is the change in total
revenue divided by the change in output.
Marginal
Revenue (MR)
=
Change in Revenue TRi-TR(i-1)
• In a perfectly competitive market, marginal
revenue (MR) = market price, because all
units are sold at the same price (market
price).
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Profit Maximization when
the Firm is a Price Taker
• In the short run, the price taker
will expand output until the
marginal revenue (MR) is just
equal to marginal cost (MC).
• This will maximize the firm’s
profits (rectangle PBAC).
• When P > MC, production of the
unit adds more to revenues than
costs. In order for the firm to
maximize its profits it will expand
output until MC = P.
• When P < MC, the unit adds more
to costs than revenues. A profit
maximizing firm will not produce
in this output range. It will reduce
output until MC = P.
MC
Price
P = MC
Profit
B
P
ATC
d (P = MR)
C
A
P > MC
P < MC
increase q
decrease q
q
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Output
MR / MC Approach
• At low output levels MR > MC.
• After some point, additional units cost more than the
MR realized from selling them.
• Profit is maximized where P = MR = MC.
Marginal Marginal
Profit
Price and
Revenue Cost
(MC) (TR - TC) cost per Unit
Output (MR)
0
2.
..
8
10
12
14
15
16
18
20
---5.
..
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
---$ 3.95
..
.
$ 1.50
$ 1.00
$ 1.75
$ 3.50
$ 4.75
$ 6.00
$ 8.25
$ 13.00
- 25.00
- 23.75
..
.
- 8.00
- .25
6.75
10.75
11.00
10.00
4.50
- 8.00
9
7
MC
Profit Maximum
P = MR = MC
MR
5
3
1
Output
2
4
6
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8 10 12 14 16 18 20
MC=MR
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Output
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
MC
MR
15
10
9
8
10
12
15
19
24
30
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
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MC=MR
Profits (π)
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Output
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
TR=Q*P
TC
π=TR-TC
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
65
75
84
92
102
114
129
148
172
202
(55)
(55)
(54)
(52)
(52) Max. π
(54)
(59)
(68)
(82)
(102)
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• If MC = MR at a fractional point,
always choose the last level of output
where MR > MC.
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Output and Costs
In the Long Run
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Short-Run & Long-Run
Cost Curves
• Each potential plant has a cost curve (SRAC).
• The choices of each plant’s short-run curves
combine to create a long-run curve (LRAC).
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Market Structures
1 – Perfectly Competitive Markets
2 – Monopolies
3 – Monopolistic Competition
4 – Oligopolies
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1 – Perfectly Competitive
Markets
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Perfectly Competitive
Markets
• Perfect Competition
• Many buyers & sellers
• No single buyer or seller exerts
influence on the market
• Informed buyers
• Identical products
• Easy market entry & exit
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Demand from Seller’s
Perspective
• Perfectly elastic
• P = MR = AR = D
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Firm vs. Industry in
Perfect Competition
P
MC
P
ΣMC
P
D=MR=AR=P
D
QFirm
Q
Single Firm
QIndustry
Industry
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Q
Short-Run in Perfectly
Competitive Markets
• MC = MR
• Provided MR > Minimum AVC
• Loss Minization
• MR > AVC but MR < ATC
• Operation reduces losses
• Shut-down Situation
• If MR < AVCmin, operating
increases losses
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Long-Run in Perfectly
Competitive Markets
• If there are profits
• New companies enter market b/c no
barriers to entry
• Drives profits towards zero
• Eventually, ATC = Price (zero profits)
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Long-Run effects on π
Perfect Competition
Π adds new entrants
Increasing supply to ΣMC2
Π @ P1
P
P
MC
ΣMC1
ΣMC2
ATC
P1
P2
D
D
QFirm2
QFirm1
Single Firm
Q
Drives Q↑ & P↓
Eliminates Π
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QIndustry2 QIndustry1
Q
Industry
2 – Monopolies
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Monopolies
• Price maker
• Single seller
• No close substitutes
• Difficult market entry
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Monopolies – Entry Barriers
• A few examples of factors that may
serve as ‘barriers’ to free entry into a
market:
• economies of scale
• government licensing
• patents
• control over an essential resource
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Demand & MR
• Demand is downward
sloping
• MR is lower than demand
P
• NB to lower price the
Monopoly must lower price
on all units sold therefore
MR associated with
increased sales reduces
revenues on a per unit basis.
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MR
D
Q
Demand, MR & TR
P
MR
D
Q
P
Elastic
Inelastic
TR
Q
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Price and Output Under Monopoly
• The monopolist will reduce price
and expand output as long as
MR > MC.
• The monopolist will raise price
and reduce output whenever
MR < MC.
• Output level q will result … and
price P (along the demand curve)
will be charged.
• At output q the average total cost
is C.
• As P > C (price > ATC) the firm
is making economic profits equal
to the area PABC.
Price
MC
Economic
profits
ATC
A
P
B
C
d
MR < MC
MR > MC
MR
q
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Quantity/time
Efficiency &
Monopolies
P
MC=MR @ point b
result is point a for P & Q
MC = S
∆abc represents
efficiency loss
PM
a
c
PE
Monopolies lead to
higher Price & lower Q
b
MR
QM
QE
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D
Q
Price Discrimination
• Conditions
• Monopoly Power
• Market Segregation
• No Resale
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Price Regulation
Monopoly Price
P
Fair-return Price
Socially-optimal Price
PM
ATC
PF
MC
PS
D
MR
QM
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QF Q
S
Q
Effects of Monopolies
• Market Inefficiency
• Higher Prices
• Monopolies P > MR = MC
• Perfect Competition P = MR = MC
• Lower Quantities
• Income Transfer
• From Buyers to Seller
• X-inefficiency
• Higher costs due to outdated
plants/equipment
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Market Regulation
• American history & big business
• Anti-trust legislation
• Modern application:
• Was Microsoft a monopoly?
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3 – Monopolistic Competition
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Monopolistic Competition
Major differences from perfectly Competitive
Market
• Products not identical (variation)
• Non price competition
• Profits
• Short-term economic profits
• Long-term normal or accounting profits
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Price and Output
• A profit-maximizing price searcher will
expand output as long as marginal revenue
exceeds marginal cost.
• Price will be lowered and output expanded
until MR = MC.
• The price charged by a price searcher will be
greater than its marginal cost.
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Price and Output: Short-Run Profit
MC
Price
• A competitive market maximizes
profits by producing where MR =
MC, at output level q …
and charges a price P along the
demand curve for that output level.
• At q the average total cost is C.
• Because the price is greater than the
average total cost per unit (P > C)
the firm is making economic profits
equal to the area ( [ P - C ] x q )
• What impact will economic profits
have if this is a typical firm?
Economic
Profits
ATC
P
C
d
MR
q
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Quantity/time
Long-Run
• Similar to perfect Competition
• Economic efficiency
• P (MR) = MC = ATC
• Efficiency
• Productive Efficiency
• Relationship between price & costs
• P = ATCmin
• Allocative Efficiency
• Supply & Demand
• MC = D
• Is monopolistic competition efficient?
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Price and Output – Long Run in a
Competitive Markets
MC
Price
• Because entry and exit are free,
competition will eventually drive
prices down to the level of ATC.
• When profits (losses) are present,
the demand curve will shift inward
(outward) until the zero profit
C=P
equilibrium is restored.
• The companies establishes
its output level where MC = MR.
• At q the average total cost is equal
to the market price. Zero economic
profit is present. No incentive for
firms to either enter or exit the
market is present.
ATC
d
MR
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q
Quantity/time
Excess Capacity
P
Allocative
Efficiency
MC = D
Productive
Efficiency
P = ATCmin
MC
ATC
P1
Excess
Capacity
Productive
inefficiency
MR
D
Q1
Qe
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Q
Differentiation
• Location
• Advertising
• Brand Loyalty
• Service
• Quality
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4 – Oligopoly
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Oligopolies
•
•
•
•
Few large companies
Identical or similar products
Difficult market entry
Non price compitetion
• Price leadership
• Collusion (cartels) vs. price war
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Terms
• Collusion
• Tacit Collusion
• Cartel
• Prisoner’s Dilemma
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Prisoner’s Dilemma
Don’t Cheat
Profit $180M
Profit $180M
Profit $150M,
then $160M
Profit $200M,
then $160M
Cheat
Profit $200M,
then $160M
Don’t Cheat
Profit $150M,
then $160M
Profit $160M
Cheat
Profit $160M
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Price & Output
Under Oligopoly
• No general theory exists for price and output
under oligopoly.
• If the firms operated independently, they
would drive down the price to the per-unit
cost of production.
• If the firms colluded perfectly, the price
would rise to the monopoly price.
• The outcome is usually between these two
extremes.
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Product Differentiation
• Price searchers produce differentiated
products – products that differ in design,
dependability, location, ease of purchase, etc.
• Rival firms produce similar products (good
substitutes) and therefore each firm confronts
a highly elastic demand curve.
• Result is attempt to compete on non-price
factors.
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Incentive to Collude
Prisoner’s Dilemma
• Oligopolists have a strong incentive to
collude and raise their prices.
• However, each firm also has an incentive to
cheat by lowering price because the demand
curve facing each firm is more elastic than
the market demand curve.
• This conflict makes collusive agreements that
are difficult to maintain.
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Gaining from Cheating
• Using industry demand Di and marginal revenue MRi,
oligopolists maximize their joint profit where MRi = MC
– at output Qi and price Pi .
• The demand facing each firm df (where no other firms cheat)
would be much more elastic than the industry demand Di .
• The firm maximizes its profit where MRf = MC by
expanding output to qf and lowering its price to Pf from Pi .
Price
Industry
Pi
Price
Individual firms have
an incentive to cheat
by cutting price to
expand output
Firm
Pi
Pf
MC
MC
MRi
Qi
MRf
Di
Quantity/time
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qf
df
Quantity/time
Kinked-Demand Curve
P
Price Decreases
Competition matches price
Price increase
Competition does not match
P1
D2
MR2
D1
Q1
MR1
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Q
Kinked-Demand Curve
P
Incentives to
- lower prices
- collusion
P1
Dmp
Q1
MRmp
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Q
Monopolistic Competition
vs. Oligopilies
• MP (many firms) vs. Oligopilies (a few firms)
• 2 measures
• 4 firm concentration ratio
• (output of 4 largest)/Total output
• Low (MP) to high (Oligopoly)
• Herfindahl index
• Σ(market shares for each firm)2
• Low (MP) to high (Oligopoly)
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