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Market Structures. Regulation & Deregulation Chapter 7 Section 4. Market Structures. Monopoly and Oligopoly can sometimes be bad for the consumer and the economy as a whole. Markets dominated by a few large firms tend to have higher prices and lower output than markets with many sellers.
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Market Structures Regulation & Deregulation Chapter 7 Section 4
Market Structures • Monopoly and Oligopoly can sometimes be bad for the consumer and the economy as a whole. • Markets dominated by a few large firms tend to have higher prices and lower output than markets with many sellers.
Market Structures • Predatory Pricing – selling a product below cost to drive competitors out of the market. • Economists are skeptical about claims of predatory pricing because the predator losses money each time it drives an endless series of rivals out of business.
Market Structures • The federal government has a number of policies that keep firms from controlling the price and supply of important goods. • If a firm controls a large share of a market, the FTC (Federal Trade Commission) and the Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division will watch that firm closely to ensure that it does not unfairly force out its competitors.
Market Structures • Antitrust laws – are laws that encourage competition in the market place. • 1890 – Sherman Antitrust Act – outlawed mergers and monopolies that limit trade between states. • Fed. Gov’t. has the power to regulate industries, to stop firms from forming cartels or monopolies.
Market Structures • 1997 – Microsoft who owns a operating system that tells a computer how to run – Department of Justice accused Microsoft of using a monopoly in operating systems to illegally extend its control over the market for a program known as a browser that allows people to use the World Wide Web.
Market Structures • Microsoft insisted that computer manufacturers that sold its operating system also included the browser. • Microsoft was accused of predatory pricing – because the company gave away its browser for free, which would ruin the other browser company, Netscape. • Microsoft’s power in one market gave it a big – and possibly unfair – advantage in related markets.
Market Structures • The Government sued Microsoft so that other companies would have more opportunities in the market. • A Federal judge ruled that Microsoft was a monopoly and began taking steps to weaken the company.
Market Structures • Breaking Up Monopolies: • The Government has used antitrust legislation to break up such companies as… • American Tobacco Company {1911} • John D. Rockefeller’s Standard Oil {1911} • American Telephone & Telegraph into 7 regional phone companies.
Market Structures • Blocking Mergers: • The Federal Government has the power to prevent the rise of monopolies. • A merger occurs when a company joins with another company or companies to form a single firm.
Market Structures • The Government tries to predict the effects of a merger on price and service when it decides whether or not to approve a merger. • While some mergers hurt the consumers by reducing competition, other can actually leave the consumer better off. • Corporate mergers will lower the overall average costs and lead to lower prices, more reliable products or service, and a more efficient industry.
Market Structures • In 1997, the Justice Department and the FTC have put together new guidelines for proposed mergers.
Market Structures • Late 1970s and early 1980s – Congress passed laws to deregulate several industries. • Deregulation – the removal of some government controls over a market. • The government no longer decides what role each company can play in a market and how much it can charge its customers.
Market Structures • Industries that have been deregulated… • Airline {1978 by President Carter} • Trucking • Banking • Railroad • Natural Gas • Television Broadcasting
Market Structures • While deregulation weakens government control, antitrust laws strengthen it. • The government uses both tools as a way to promote competition. • In many cases of deregulation, many new firms have entered the deregulated industries right away. • Competition increases in the airline, trucking, and banking industries.
Market Structures • Typically, this period of wild growth was followed by the widespread disappearance of some firms in each industry. • This weeding out of weaker players is considered healthy for the economy.
Market Structures • Freed from regulatory restrictions, many of the large airline carries competed aggressively for the busiest routes. • For most travelers, the increased competition created lower prices. • The end result has been that many busy airports now have one dominant airline, and in some fares are actually higher than before deregulation.
Market Structures • In the early 2000s, Congress gave a $ 5 billion bail out of the airline industry. This was due to higher operating costs for the airlines, sharply rising labor costs, and loss of profits. • September 11th, even hurt the industry much more. • Some airline companies may be gone in the next 5-10 years and others will make it because of the $ 10 billion in federal loan guarantees that the government is using to help the airline industry.