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CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
Principles of
Microeconomics, 9e
; ;
By
Karl E. Case,
Ray C. Fair &
Sharon M. Oster
© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Principles of Economics 9e by Case, Fair and Oster
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CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
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PART III MARKET IMPERFECTIONS AND
THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENT
15
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
Monopolistic
Competition
Prepared by:
Fernando & Yvonn Quijano
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PART III MARKET IMPERFECTIONS AND
THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENT
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
Monopolistic
Competition
15
CHAPTER OUTLINE
Industry Characteristics
Product Differentiation and
Advertising
How Many Varieties?
How Do Firms Differentiate Products?
Advertising
Price and Output Determination in
Monopolistic Competition
Product Differentiation and Demand
Elasticity
Price/Output
Determination in the Short Run
Price/Output Determination in the Long
Run
Economic Efficiency and Resource
Allocation
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CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
Monopolistic Competition
 FIGURE 13.2 Characteristics of Different Market Organizations
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Industry Characteristics
monopolistic competition A common form of
industry (market) structure in the United States,
characterized by a large number of firms, no
barriers to entry, and product differentiation.
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
TABLE 15.1 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in
Selected Industries, 2002
Industry Designation
Travel trailers and campers
Four Largest
Firms
38
Eight Largest
Twenty
Number of
Firms
Largest Firms
Firms
45
58
733
Games, toys
39
48
63
732
Wood office furniture
34
43
56
546
Book printing
33
54
68
560
Curtains and draperies
17
25
38
1,778
Fresh or frozen seafood
14
24
48
529
Women’s dresses
18
23
48
528
6
10
18
6,775
Miscellaneous plastic products
Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1997 Census of Manufacturers, Concentration Ratios in Manufacturing. Subject Series EC92m315, June, 2001.
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Product Differentiation and Advertising
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
How Many Varieties?
product differentiation A strategy that
firms use to achieve market power.
Accomplished by producing products that
have distinct positive identities in
consumers’ minds.
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Product Differentiation and Advertising
How Do Firms Differentiate Products?
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
horizontal differentiation Products differ
in ways that make them better for some
people and worse for others.
behavioral economics A branch of
economics that uses the insights of
psychology and economics to investigate
decision making.
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Product Differentiation and Advertising
How Do Firms Differentiate Products?
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
commitment device Actions that
individuals take in one period to try to
control their behavior in a future period.
vertical differentiation A product
difference that, from everyone’s
perspective, makes a product better than
rival products.
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Product Differentiation and Advertising
How Do Firms Differentiate Products?
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
An Economist Makes Tea
Bottled iced tea is a classic example of a monopolistically
competitive market. None of the brands are exactly alike.
Nor are the teas priced the same.
Goldman and Nalebuff
discovered that sugar
beyond some point adds
little taste, yet comes at a
health cost—more calories.
Given consumers’ new
awareness of healthy and
natural foods, Honest Tea
became an overnight
success.
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Product Differentiation and Advertising
Advertising
TABLE 15.2 Total Advertising
Expenditures in 2006
Billions of Dollars
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
Newspapers
$49.0
Television
66.8
Direct mail
59.6
Yellow pages
14.4
Internet
15.0
Radio
19.1
Magazines
24.0
Total
247.9
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Product Differentiation and Advertising
Advertising
TABLE 15.3 Domestic Advertising Spending by Category
in 2006 in Billions of Dollars
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
Rank
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
Category
Automotive
Retail
Telecommunications
Medicine & remedies
General services
Financial services
Food, beverages, & candy
Personal care
Airlines, hotels, car rental, travel
Movies, recorded video, & music
Restaurants
Media
Government, politics, religion
Insurance
Real estate
Apparel
Computers, software
Home furnishings
Beer, wine, & liquor
Education
2006
$19.8
19.1
11.0
9.2
8.7
8.7
7.2
5.7
5.4
5.4
5.3
5.1
3.5
3.5
3.1
2.9
2.5
2.2
2.1
1.9
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Product Differentiation and Advertising
Advertising
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
The Case for Advertising
The advocates of spirited competition believe that differentiated
products and advertising give the market system its vitality and
are the basis of its power. They are the only ways to begin to
satisfy the enormous range of tastes and preferences in a modern
economy. Product differentiation also helps to ensure high quality
and efficient production, and advertising provides consumers with
the valuable information on product availability, quality, and price
that they need to make efficient choices in the marketplace.
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Product Differentiation and Advertising
Advertising
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
The Case Against Product Differentiation and Advertising
The bottom line, critics of product differentiation and advertising
argue, is waste and inefficiency. Enormous sums are spent to
create minute, meaningless, and possibly nonexistent differences
among products. Advertising raises the cost of products and
frequently contains very little information. Often, it is merely an
annoyance. Product differentiation and advertising have turned
the system upside down: People exist to satisfy the needs of the
economy, not vice versa. Advertising can lead to unproductive
warfare and may serve as a barrier to entry, thus reducing real
competition.
Open Questions
There are strong arguments on both sides of the advertising
debate, and even the empirical evidence yields to conflicting
conclusions.
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Product Differentiation and Advertising
Advertising
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
Can Information Reduce Obesity?
Policy makers have been working to
increase the level of information that
consumers have about products. In the
early 1990s, the Food and Drug
Administration passed rules requiring
most processed foods sold in grocery
stores to carry nutrition labels. The
current hot topic in the labeling area
involves restaurant meals. With growing
obesity in the United States, many policy
makers think that one way to fight the
problem is to require calorie and fat
labeling in restaurants.
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Price and Output Determination in Monopolistic Competition
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
Product Differentiation and Demand Elasticity
 FIGURE 15.2 Product Differentiation Reduces the Elasticity of Demand Facing a Firm
The demand curve that a monopolistic competitor faces is likely to be less elastic
than the demand curve that a perfectly competitive firm faces. Demand is more
elastic than the demand curve that a monopolist faces because close substitutes for
the products of a monopolistic competitor are available.
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Price and Output Determination in Monopolistic Competition
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
Price/Output Determination in the Short Run
 FIGURE 15.3 Monopolistic Competition in the Short Run
In the short run, a monopolistically competitive firm will produce up to the point MR = MC.
At q0 = 2,000 in panel a, the firm is earning short-run profits equal to P0ABC = $2,000.
In panel b, another monopolistically competitive firm with a similar cost structure is shown
facing a weaker demand and suffering short-run losses at q1 = 1,000, equal to CABP1 =
$1,000.
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Price and Output Determination in Monopolistic Competition
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
Price/Output Determination in the Long Run
 FIGURE 15.4 Monopolistically Competitive Firm at Long-Run Equilibrium
As new firms enter a monopolistically competitive industry in search of profits, the demand
curves of profit-making existing firms begin to shift to the left, pushing marginal revenue
with them as consumers switch to the new close substitutes. This process continues until
profits are eliminated, which occurs for a firm when its demand curve is just tangent to its
average total cost curve.
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Economic Efficiency and Resource Allocation
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
Because entry is easy and economic profits are
eliminated in the long run, we might conclude that
the result of monopolistic competition is efficient.
There are two problems, however.
First, once a firm achieves any degree of market
power by differentiating its product (as is the case in
monopolistic competition), its profit-maximizing
strategy is to hold down production and charge a
price above marginal cost.
Second, the final equilibrium in a monopolistically
competitive firm is necessarily to the left of the low
point on its average total cost curve.
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REVIEW TERMS AND CONCEPTS
monopolistic competition
product differentiation
vertical differentiation
CHAPTER 15 Monopolistic Competition
behavioral economics
commitment device
horizontal differentiation
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