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Market Structures: Perfect Competition. Ch 7.1, p. 159. Words. Perfect competition Commodity Barrier to entry Imperfect competition Start-up costs. Perfect Competition.
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Market Structures:Perfect Competition Ch 7.1, p. 159
Words • Perfect competition • Commodity • Barrier to entry • Imperfect competition • Start-up costs
Perfect Competition • A market structure in which a large number of firms all produce the same product and no single seller controls supply or prices
Perfect Competition • Requires 4 things: • Many buyers and sellers • Identical products • Informed buyers and sellers • Free market entry and exit
Start-up Costs • The expenses a new business must pay before producing and selling goods/services • Sometimes up to 10x more than anticipated
Technology • Good or bad for starting a company? • Good or bad for competition?
The reason we care about competition • Perfectly competitive markets have the lowest possible prices. • Buyers get the best deals • The last thing we want is a monopoly
Q and A • What are the four conditions of perfect competition? • Many buyers and sellers, identical products, informed ppl, free market entry/exit • Which of these markets are perfectly competitive? • Bottled water? Pizza? Cars? Computers?
Monopoly Ch 7.2, p. 165
Terms • Monopoly • Economies of scale • Natural monopoly • Gov’t. monopoly • Patent • Franchise • License • Price discrimination • Market power
Monopoly • A market in which a single seller dominates
Why have monopolies? • Economies of scale make it more profitable to have a single huge company • Econ. of scale: average cost per unit decreases as output increases
Natural Monopolies • A market that runs most efficiently when one large firm supplies all of the output
Government Monopolies • A monopoly created or approved by the gov’t. • Mail service? • Gov’t. created monopolies exist for normal ppl too: • Patents • Franchises • Licenses
Sports Leagues • Aka government-approved monopolies • They set prices, teams, and strictly control a single flow of goods/services
Monopolist’s Dilemma • If a monopolist produces more, the price of a good will fall. • That sucks when you control all goods.
Setting Prices • Easier when you control the entire market. • Look to: • Profit goals • Price discrimination: who will pay what • Market power: monopoly’s control • Targeted Discounts: who can we trap?
Discount Examples • Discounted Airline Fares • Rebates • Senior Citizen or Student • Children • Stay Free Hotels
Inquiries • Why are monopolies bad for the economy as a whole? • What is market power? • How does price discrimination work?
Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly Ch 7.3, p.174
Terms of Art • Monopolistic competition • Differentiation • Nonprice competition • Oligopoly • Price war • Collusion • Price fixing • Cartel
Monopolistic Competition • A market structure in which many companies sell products that are similar but not identical • E.g. blue jeans
Four Conditions of Monopolistic Competition • Many firms • Few artificial barriers to entry • Little control over price • Differentiated products
Nonprice Competition • A way to attract customers through style, service, location, etc. • But not by a low price!
Nonprice Options • Physical characteristics • Location • Service • advertising
Random: Oligopoly • Like a monopoly, but with a few firms instead of one. • E.g., computer software • Collusion is common • Illegal agreements to fix prices in a cartel-like manner
Queries • What is differentiation? • Can you give an example of price fixing? • How do you decide which jeans to buy?
Regulation and Deregulation Ch 7.4, p. 180
Words • Predatory pricing • Antitrust laws • Trust • Merger • Deregulation
Market Power • There are lots of ways to dominate a marketplace • Having a monopoly is just one of them • Sometimes firms even attempt predatory pricing • Lowing prices below input costs to drive competitors out of business
Government Enters Ring • Trusts were a problem at the turn of the 20th century • Trust: illegal grouping of companies that discouraged competition • Basically a cartel • So we started to create antitrust legislation • Aimed to break up these huge companies dominating the market
What’s more • The gov’t. didn’t just stop at breaking up trusts • They also block mergers from happening in the first place • Merger: when two or more companies join to form a single firm
So when do we allow monopolistic mergers? • When companies can prove that a monopolistic merger would lower costs and prices or lead to a better product.
Deregulation • The removal of some government controls over a market • Lots of ways to look at pros/cons • Airlines were deregulated with President Carter in 1978 and super regulated in 2001 under Bush
Questions • What is an antitrust law? • When do we allow monopolistic mergers to happen? • What is predatory pricing?