Perfect_Competition_Monopoly_Oligopoly_Monopolistic
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Transcript Perfect_Competition_Monopoly_Oligopoly_Monopolistic
Perfect Competition,
Monopoly, Oligopoly and
Monopolistic Competition
in Seller Markers
Allan Fels, Professor of Government
The Australia and New Zealand School of Government (ANZSOG)
1) PERFECT COMPETITION
Characteristics
Many buyers and sellers, with no dominant firm
Homogenous product
Free entry and exit (usually)
Examples
Wheat
Milk
1) PERFECT COMPETITION
Behaviour and Pricing
Firms are price takers
Continual pressure to satisfy customer demand,
minimise cost, innovate in order to survive
Collusion
Difficult:
Too many competitors to organise
If prices rise, there will be entry by competitors
Government induced collusion. The government
may run the market as a cartel by
a) setting a minimum price;
b) restricting entry
Examples
Taxis
Doctors
2) MONOPOLY
Characteristics
Sole seller
No close product substitutes
Causes of monopoly
Entry barriers
Source of entry barriers
Monopoly of resources
Government regulation
Production process (natural monopoly)
Examples
Networks? E.g. telco, energy
Innovators?
2) MONOPOLY
Behaviour and prices
Assume profit maximisation occurs? Or less pressure to operate efficiently
Monopoly can determine its own price but in raising price it is at the
expense of quantity
The concept of marginal revenue i.e. the addition to revenue from
producing and selling one more unit
Monopoly produces up to the point where marginal cost equals marginal
revenue
Profits tend to be “above normal” but accounting results can be a poor
indicator of monopoly profits
Price discrimination requires
Monopoly
Different elasticities
Ability to separate the market
3) OLIGOPOLY
Characteristics
Few sellers
Interdependent
Pricing and behaviour
Note the relevance of game theory
Prisoners’ dilemma
Cooperation vs conflict
Cournot
Adjust price
Bertrand
Adjust quantity
Examples
Banks, oil companies, cement
4) MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
Characteristics
Many sellers
Product differentiation
Free entry
Examples
Books, CDs, films, computer games, restaurants,
piano lessons, furniture etc
Behaviour
Free entry tends to prevent “excessive” profits
5) INDICATORS OF COMPETITION
Imports
Substitutes
Entry
Countervailing power
Other factors eg. dynamic factors such as
technology
Vertical integration?
6) PUBLIC POLICIES
Monopoly
1.
2.
3.
4.
Introduce more competition
Regulate behaviour
Public ownership
Competition for the market as opposed to
competition in the market
5. Take no action
Collusion
Cartel laws
Price regulation
Structural remedies