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Market Structure

This document discusses different market structures: 1) Perfect competition is theoretical with many small firms, homogeneous goods, perfect information and no barriers to entry or exit. Firms are price takers. 2) Monopolies have one dominant firm with barriers to entry like high costs, patents or economies of scale. They can influence prices. 3) Oligopolies and monopolistic competition involve a small number of large firms producing differentiated goods like restaurants or phones. They compete but can still impact the market.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
27 views

Market Structure

This document discusses different market structures: 1) Perfect competition is theoretical with many small firms, homogeneous goods, perfect information and no barriers to entry or exit. Firms are price takers. 2) Monopolies have one dominant firm with barriers to entry like high costs, patents or economies of scale. They can influence prices. 3) Oligopolies and monopolistic competition involve a small number of large firms producing differentiated goods like restaurants or phones. They compete but can still impact the market.

Uploaded by

jessmgaffney
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Costs, revenues and profits

Market structure

two firms
smallfirmswith cokelarge e.g
andpepsi.airous
producedifferentiation andbowingand
e g indian restaurants appleandsamsung no
highly
monopolistic duopoly
competition
competitive Oligopoly monopoly competition
few largefirms one firme.g
perfect supermarketse.g
Thameswater
competition
andcoffee
manysmallfirms
sellingthesame
productegfruit
andvegmarket
Perfect competition
• theoretical market structure
• Fruit and veg market near perfect competition

Characteristics;
• no barriers to entry or exit the market
• Very larger number of buyers and sellers
• Homogenous goods (identical)
• Perfect knowledge for both consumers and producers

Many buyers and sellers


• neither the buyer or seller has enough power to in uence the market forces (S&D
set prices)
• Many buyers and sellers
• Each rm is relatively small
• All price takers (can’t in uence the price)
• If price rises people will go to another supplier
• Firms demand is perfectly elastic
p

P D

QD
• Can sell all of its output at current market price
• Highly competitive
• If a change in increased demand e.g. trends = increased pro ts. New rms then
enter the market = increased supply therefore decreased price
• Most rms make a normal pro t (0 pro ts)
Homogenous products
• identical to each other e.g. apples
• Firms can try and change this, but increases cost from advertising and marketing

Perfect knowledge
• assume consumers know exactly how much each rm is charging
• Assume all rms have knowledge of other rms prices + costs
• nearly perfect knowledge due to the internet

However in reality there are always barriers to entry and non-homogenous

Barriers to entry
Factors that can stop a rm from entering and exiting the market:
• high start up costs (machinery)
• Legal reasons (pattens, laws, regulations, Royal Mail)
• Access to land and resources
• Lack of knowledge/ experience
• Larger rms bene t from economies of scale
• Access to nance (banks won’t provide loans as too high risk)
• Brand loyalty (won’t swap from coke to Pepsi)

Barriers in the banking sector


Regulatory barriers - legal requirements, high capital requirements
Implementing IT systems - large sink costs (costs which can’t be recovered if the rm
leaves the market)
Marketing and branding - large sink costs in marketing to establish a banking brand
Distribution barriers - branch net work needed to reach customers

Monopoly
• high capital costs
• Supply chain control/ distribution net works
• Excess of scarce resources
• Legal (patents)
• Economies of scale
• Predatory pricing
• Marketing and branding
• Sink costs (Cant be returned on exit)
• Subsides/ regulatory obligations stop exiting

Pure monopoly - a single supplier that constitutes the entire industry (or market) e.g.
Royal Mail and Thames water and the underground

Legal monopoly - a rm that has more than 25% market share e.g. Tesco’s, Microsoft,
google
more Less
competitive competitive

perfect monopoly
competition

Concentration ratio - measures the percentage of output or sales of the largest rms in a
given industry (usually top 4)

perfect monopolistic oligopoly monopoly


competition competition

0 low concentration 50 medium 80 100


concentration high
concentration

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