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Five Types of Market Structure. Perfect CompetitionMonopolistic CompetitionOligopolyOligopsonyMonopoly. Perfect Competition. Economic model that describes a hypothetical market form in which no producer or consumer has the market power to influence prices.. Description of Perfect Competition . E
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1. Market Structure By Group #1:
Silvia Luque
Kyoungoung Min
Jasung Park
Charlie Li Qian
Samantha Rodriguez
2. Five Types of Market Structure Perfect Competition
Monopolistic Competition
Oligopoly
Oligopsony
Monopoly
3. Perfect Competition Economic model that describes a hypothetical market form in which no producer or consumer has the market power to influence prices.
4. Description of Perfect Competition Efficient outcome
Foundation of the theory of supply and demand
Market equilibrium
Resources and allocated and used efficiently
Collective social welfare is maximazed
5. Requirements
6. Why does a Perfect Competition firms demand curve is also its marginal revenue curve? For a perfectly competitive firm with no market control, the marginal revenue curve is a horizontal line. Because a perfectly competitive firm is a price taker and faces a horizontal demand curve, its marginal revenue curve is also horizontal and coincides with its average revenue (and demand) curve.
7. Perfect Competition Graph
8. Example of Perfect Competition eBay auctions can be often be seen as perfectly competitive. There are very low barriers to entry (anyone can sell a product, provided they have some knowledge of computers and the Internet), many sellers of common products and many potential buyers.
In the eBay market competitive advertising does not occur, because the products are homogeneous and this would be redundant. However, generic advertising (advertising which benefits the industry as a whole and does not mention any brand names) may occur.
9. Free Software: Example of Perfect Competition
Free software works along lines that approximate perfect competition. Anyone is free to enter and leave the market at no cost. All code is freely accessible and modifiable, and individuals are free to behave independently.
11. Monopolistic Competition
Characteristics:
A large number of firms- it is like perfect competition
Entry easy – few barriers to entry and exit, so it is unlike monopoly
Differentiated products– they are therefore closed, but not perfect, substitutes so, they have market power(it means each firm has a unique product)
12. Monopolistic Competition
The strategies for Differentiated products
Fast-food market
Mac Donald's, Taco-Bell, and Wendy’s
Brand Name
Starbucks
13. Monopolistic Competition Implications for the diagram:
Above-Normal Profit
14. Monopolistic Competition
15. Monopolistic Competition
16. Monopolistic Competition This is the long run equilibrium position of a firm in monopolistic competition.
In a monopolistically competitive industry, entering firms produce a close substitute, not an identical or standardized product.
17. Perfect and Monopolistic Competition Compared
18. Monopolistic Competition In each case there are many firms in the industry
Each can try to differentiate its product in some way
Entry and exit to the industry is relatively free
Consumers and producers do not have perfect knowledge of the market – the market may indeed be relatively localised.
19. Monopolistic Competition Restaurants
Plumbers/electricians/local builders
Private schools
Plant hire firms
Insurance brokers
Health clubs
Hairdressers
Estate agents
Damp proofing control firms
20.
An OLIGOPOLY is a market form in which a market or industry is dominated by a small number of sellers(Oligopolists) OLIGOPOLY
21. Example of Oligopoly around our life in U.S.A.
OLIGOPOLY
22. Fast foods McDonalds, Burger King, KFC
23. Bookstores
24. Oils
25. Electrical goods
26. Mobile phone networks
27. Characteristics of Oligopoly
Product Branding
Entry barriers
Interdependent decision-making
Non-price competition OLIGOPOLY
28. Oligopsony A market dominated by many sellers and a few buyers
29. Definition of Oligopsony An oligopsony is a market form in which the number of buyers is small while the number of sellers in theory could be large.
This typically happens in market for inputs where a small number of firms are competing to obtain factors of production.
It contrasts with an oligopoly, where there are many buyers but just a few sellers.
An oligopsony is a form of imperfect competition.
30. Cocoa: Example of Oligopsony
31. Three Buyers of Cocoa Bean Three firms buy the vast majority of world cocoa bean production, mostly from small farmers in third-world countries.
32. Tobacco in US: Example of Oligopsony
33. Three Major Buyers of Tobacco in US Three companies (Altria, Brown & Williamson, and Lorillard Tobacco Company) buy almost 90% of all tobacco grown in the US.
34. Characteristics of Oligopsony The buyers have a major advantage over the sellers.
They can play off one supplier against another, thus lowering their costs.
They can also dictate exact specifications to suppliers, for delivery schedules, quality, and (in the case of agricultural products) crop varieties.
They also pass off much of the risks of overproduction, natural losses, and variations in cyclical demand to the suppliers.
35. What is a Monopoly? A monopoly is a market structure in which there is a single supplier of a product .
“Monopoly" is a term from economics that refers to a situation where only a single company is providing an irreplaceable good or service.
36. How do Monopolies Occur? This was a side effect of being the inventor of a product for which there is high demand but no preexisting supply. Other monopolies occur when consolidation across industries results in a single supplier. This was the case with the company Standard Oil, which had to be broken up by the government in 1911.
37. Description of a Monopoly One firm that produces a good that is desired by customers
The firm in question is the only place where the good or service can be found, they have the ability to charge whatever they want, to the damage of market competition that is the foundation of a healthy economy.
38. Advantages of a Monopoly Research and Development. Supernormal Profit can be used to fund high cost capital investment spending. Successful research can be used for improved products and lower costs in the long term.
Economies of scale. Increased output will lead to a decrease in average costs of production. These can be passed on to consumers in the form of lower prices.
39. Disadvantages of a Monopoly Price and Lower Output than under Perfect Competition. This leads to a decline in consumer surplus and a deadweight welfare loss
A monopoly is productively inefficient because it is not the lowest point on the Average Cost curve
40. Disadvantages of a Monopoly(Continued)
A Monopolist makes Supernormal Profit leading to an unequal distribution of income.
A monopoly may use its market power and pay lower prices to its suppliers.
41. Graphing a Monopoly
42. Example of a Monopoly A recent example of a monopoly would be that of the pharmaceutical giant Pfizer over the drug Viagra®, which at the time of its release had no substitutes or competitors.
Microsoft; settled anti-trust litigation in the U.S. in 2001; fined by the European Commission in 2004, which was upheld for the most part by the Court of First Instance of the European Communities in 2007. The fine was 1.35 Billion USD in 2008 for incompliance with the 2004 rule
44. Monopolistic Competition
Characteristics:
A large number of firms- it is like perfect competition
Entry easy – few barriers to entry and exit, so it is unlike monopoly
Differentiated products– they are therefore closed, but not perfect, substitutes so, they have market power(it means each firm has a unique product)
45. Monopolistic Competition
The strategies for Differentiated products
Fast-food market
Mac Donald's, Taco-Bell, and Wendy’s
Brand Name
Starbucks
46. Monopolistic Competition Implications for the diagram:
Above-Normal Profit
47. Monopolistic Competition
48. Monopolistic Competition
49. Monopolistic Competition This is the long run equilibrium position of a firm in monopolistic competition.
In a monopolistically competitive industry, entering firms produce a close substitute, not an identical or standardized product.
50. Perfect and Monopolistic Competition Compared
51. Monopolistic Competition In each case there are many firms in the industry
Each can try to differentiate its product in some way
Entry and exit to the industry is relatively free
Consumers and producers do not have perfect knowledge of the market – the market may indeed be relatively localised.
52. Monopolistic Competition Restaurants
Plumbers/electricians/local builders
Private schools
Plant hire firms
Insurance brokers
Health clubs
Hairdressers
Estate agents
Damp proofing control firms
53. References http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_structure
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oligopsony
http://www.callebaut.com/nlnl/
http://www.autoracing1.com/MarkC/2001/0904Sponsors.htm
http://www.rcpedreira.com.ar/Paginas/companias.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/oligopoly
http://ww.bized.co.uk/educator/16-19/economics/firms/activity/structure.htm
http://tutor2u.net/economics/revision-notes/a2-micro-oligopoly-overview.html
http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-a-monopoly.htm