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7-1: WHAT IS PERFECT COMPETITION?. Competition. Economists classify markets based on how competitive they are Market structure: an economic model of competition among businesses in the same industry. Perfect Competition. Definition: ideal model of a market economy
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Competition • Economists classify markets based on how competitive they are • Market structure: an economic model of competition among businesses in the same industry
Perfect Competition • Definition: ideal model of a market economy • Perfect competition is used as a basis to determine how competitive a market is
5 Characteristics of Perfect Competition • 1. Numerous buyers and sellers • This ensures that no single buyer or seller has the power to control the price in the market
5 Characteristics of Perfect Competition (continued) • Buyers have lots of options • Sellers are able to sell their products at market price
2. Standardized product • A product that consumers see as identical regardless of the producer • Example: milk, eggs, etc.
Characteristics of Perfect Competition (continued) • 3. Freedom to enter and exit markets • Producers enter the market when it is profitable and exit when it is unprofitable
Characteristics of Perfect Competition (continued) • 4. Independent buyers and sellers • This allows supply and demand to set the equilibrium price
Characteristics of Perfect Competition (continued) • 5. Well-informed buyers and sellers • Buyers compare prices • Sellers know what consumers are willing to pay for goods
Price Taker • When these 5 conditions are met, sellers become price takers—a business that accepts the market price determined by supply and demand
Imperfect Competition • Market structures that lack one of the conditions needed for perfect competition are examples of imperfect competition • This means there are only a few sellers and/or products are not standardized • Examples: corn and beef markets
Characteristics of a Monopoly • Monopoly: a market structure in which only one seller sells a product for which there are no close substitutes • Pure monopolies are rare
Characteristics of a Monopoly (continued) • A cartel is close to a monopoly • Cartel: a group of sellers that act together to set prices and limit output • Example: OPEC—11 nations hold more than 2/3 of the world’s oil reserves
Characteristics of a Monopoly (continued) • A monopoly is a price maker—a business that does not have to consider competitors when setting the price of its product • Consumers accept the price of the product
Characteristics of a Monopoly (continued) • Other firms struggle to enter the market due to a barrier to entry—something that stops the business from entering a market
3 Characteristics of Monopolies • 1. Only One Seller • Supply of product has no close substitutes
3 Characteristics of Monopolies • 2. A Restricted, Regulated Market • In some cases, government regulations allow a single firm to control a market (think utilities)
3 Characteristics of Monopolies • 3. Control of Prices • Prices are controlled since there are no close substitutes
Types of Monopolies • First, not all monopolies are harmful • Natural monopoly: occurs when the costs of production are lowest with only one producer
Types of Monopolies (continued) • Example of a natural monopoly= public utilities. It would be inefficient to have more than one a water company competing for customers. • A single supplier would be most efficient according to economies of scale:when the average cost of production falls as the producer grows larger
Types of Monopolies (continued) • Government monopoly: exists because the government wither owns and runs the business or authorizes only one producer • Example: (U.S. Postal Service), DMV
Types of Monopolies (continued) • Technological monopoly: occurs when a firm controls a manufacturing method, an invention, or a type of technology • Example: a patent, where an inventor has exclusive rights to that invention or process for a certain number of years
Types of Monopolies (continued) • Geographic monopoly: exists when there are no other producers within a certain region • Example: professional sports teams
Businesses like Monopolies or more Market power • Cartels • Mergers • Predatory Pricing – price below costs until competitors go out of business • Require a store to stock all of its products…
Government Promotes Competition • 1890 Sherman Anti-trust Act • Outlaws mergers and monopolies that limits trade between states • Companies broken up under the law • 1911 Standard Oil and Trust • 1982 AT&T
Microsoft… • 1997 accused of using near monopoly to take over operating system market • 1999 Judge ruled against Microsoft. • 2001 deal – Microsoft can link Internet Explorer to their operating system, but can’t force computer companies to only provide Microsoft on new computers.
Government Promotes Competition… • By preventing mergers • AOL and Time Warner – OK to merge • Libbey and Anchor Hocking – not allowed to merge • Degregulation • Some regulations reduce competition • Airlines, banking, trucking… • More competitors join
Questions • 1. Suppose that you went to a farmers’ market and found several different farmers selling cucumbers. Would you be likely to find a wide range of prices for cucumbers? Why or why not?
2. What would happen to a wheat farmer who tried to sell his wheat for $2.50 per bushel if the market price were $2.00 per bushel? Why?
3. In 2003, 95% of the households on the U.S. had access to only 1 cable TV company in their area. What type of monopoly did cable TV companies have? Explain your answer.
4. In 2002 the patent on the antihistamine Claritin expired. Using the 3 characteristics of a monopoly, explain what happened to the market for Claritin when the patent expired.