Chapter 4
Chapter 4
MARKET
STRUCTURES
INTRODUCTION
Industries are divided into categories according to the
degree of competition that exists between the firms within
the industry. There are four such categories.
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• The nature of the product. Do all firms produce an
identical product, or do firms produce their own
particular brand or model or variety?
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The table below shows the differences between the four
categories.
Implication for
Number of Freedom of
Type of Market Nature of Product Examples demand curve for
firms Entry
the firm
Perfect Cabbages, Horizontal. The
Very many Unrestricted Homogeneous
Competition carrots firm is a price-taker
Downward sloping
but relatively price
Monopolistic Builders,
Many Unrestricted Differentiated elastic. The firm
Competition Restaurants
has some control
over the price
1. Cement, 2. Downward
1. Undifferentiated
Oligopoly Few Restricted Cars, Electrical sloping, relatively
2. Differentiated
Appliances inelastic
Downward
sloping, more
Restricted or Prescription inelastic than
Monopoly One completely Unique Drugs, Public oligopoly. The
blocked Utility firm has
considerable
control over price
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The market structure under which a firm operates will
The market structure
determine its behavior. Firms under perfect competition will
determines the
behavior of the firm. behave quite differently from firms which are monopolists,
which will behave differently again from firms under
oligopoly or monopolistic competition. This behavior (or
‘conduct’) will in turn affect the firm’s performance: its
prices, profits, efficiency, etc. In many cases, it will also
affect other firms’ performance: their prices, profits,
efficiency, etc. The collective conduct of all the firms in the
industry will affect the whole industry’s performance.
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PERFECT COMPETITION
Perfect Competition in the Short-run
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the price determined by the interaction of demand and
supply in the whole market.
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world industries. It can help governments to formulate
policies towards industry.
FIGURE 4.1 Short run equilibrium of industry and firm under perfect competition
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Figure 4.1 shows a short-run equilibrium for both industry
and a firm under perfect competition. Let us examine the
determination of price, output and profit in turn.
Profit
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Profit and losses in the Short-run
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A fall in market demand from D to D’ results in the market
price to fall from P1 to P2 and also cause a firm’s demand
curve and price to fall and also causes it to make normal
profit at point B, where MC = MR. This is because at point
B, the price is equal to average cost, where the firm makes
normal profit.
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Economic Losses in the short-run
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average variable cost, AVC. Therefore, the firm should
continue to produce an output at which marginal cost
equals marginal revenue. Why? Let’s see this through an
example.
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In the short run, a firm cannot avoid its fixed costs. But it
can avoid variable costs by temporarily laying off workers
and shutting down. In this case if the firm shuts down and
produces no output, it incurs an economic loss equal to its
total fixed cost, which in this case is $5000. This loss is the
largest that a firm need incur. However, in this case if it
produces then it will minimize its loss by making a loss of
$2000. Hence, when price is greater than AVC, the firm
continues to produce as it is able to cover part of its fixed
cost ($2000 of the $5000) and the whole of its variable cost
($5000).
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FIGURE 4.5 Shutdown down point
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produces nothing. At a price of P4, the firm is indifferent
between shutting down and producing Q4. Either way, it
incurs a loss equal to its fixed cost.
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the long run. Suppose there are two industries in the
economy, and that firms in Industry A are earning economic
profits. By definition, firms in Industry A are earning a return
greater than the return available in Industry B. That means
that firms in Industry B are earning less than they could in
Industry A. Firms in Industry B are experiencing economic
losses.
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Profit per unit is $0.14 ($0.40 − $0.26). The farmer thus
earns a profit of $938 per month (=$0.14 × 6,700).
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firms enter as long as there are economic profits to be
made—as long as price exceeds ATC in Panel (b). As price
falls, marginal revenue falls to MR’ and the firm reduces the
quantity it supplies, moving along the marginal cost (MC)
curve to the lowest point on the ATC curve. Although the
output of individual firms falls in response to falling prices,
there are now more firms, so industry output rises to Q1
million pounds per month in Panel (a).
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FIGURE 4.7 Eliminating Economic Losses in the long-run
Panel (b) shows that at the initial price P1, firms in the
industry cannot cover average total cost (MR1 is below
ATC). That induces some firms to leave the industry, shifting
the supply curve in Panel (a) to S2, reducing industry output
to Q2 and raising price to P2. At that price (MR2), firms earn
zero economic profit, and exit from the industry ceases.
Panel (b) shows that the firm increases output from q1 to q2;
total output in the market falls in Panel (a) because there
are fewer firms.
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The Long-run industry supply curve
If price falls back to its original level (i.e. points a and c are
at the same price) the long-run supply curve will be
horizontal, Figure 4.8 (a). This would occur if there were no
change in firms’ average cost curves. Price would simply
return to the bottom of firms’ LRAC curve. If, however, the
entry of new firms creates a shortage of factors of
production, this will bid up factor prices. Firms’ LRAC curve
will shift vertically upwards, and so the long run equilibrium
price will be higher. The long-run supply curve of the
industry, therefore, will slope upwards, as in Figure 4.8(b).
This is the case of increasing industry costs or external
diseconomies of scale.
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If the expansion of the industry lowers firms’ LRAC curve,
due, say, to the building-up of an industrial infrastructure
(distribution channels, specialist suppliers, banks,
communications, etc.), the long-run supply curve will slope
downwards, as in Figure 4.8(c). This is the case of
decreasing industry costs or external economies of scale.
FIGURE 4.8 Various long-run industry supply curves under perfect competition
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ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
Resources are said to be allocated efficiently if:
Productive Efficiency
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FIGURE 4.9 Productive Efficiency – Macro Approach
Micro approach:
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FIGURE 4.10 Productive Efficiency – Micro Approach
Allocative Efficiency
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From the firms’ point of view, the price is equal to marginal
cost, and from the consumers’ point of view, the price is
equal to marginal benefit or the marginal utility. Suppose
that the marginal benefit from consuming a good were
higher than the marginal cost to society of producing it. It
could then be argued that society would be better off
producing more of the good because, by increasing
production, more could be added to benefits than to costs.
Equally, if the marginal cost were above the marginal
benefit from consuming a good, society would be
producing too much of the good and would benefit from
producing less. The best possible position is thus where
marginal benefit is equal to marginal cost – in other words,
where price is set equal to marginal cost.
FIGURE 4.11 MU = MC
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When P = MC, both consumer and producer surplus is
maximized and there is no under or overallocation of
resources. If all markets in an economy operated in this
way, resources would be used so effectively that no
reallocation of resources could generate an overall
improvement. Allocative efficiency would be attained.
Dynamic efficiency
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For example, investment in research and development
today means that production can be carried out more
efficiently at some future date. Furthermore, the
development of new products may also mean that a
different mix of goods and services may serve consumers
better in the long term.
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Perfect Competition and the Public Interest
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4. Normal Profits: The combination of (long-run)
production being at minimum average cost and the firm
making only normal profit keeps prices at a minimum.
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2. Lack of Variety: Perfectly competitive industries produce
undifferentiated products. This lack of variety might be
seen as a disadvantage to the consumer. Under
monopolistic competition and oligopoly there is often
intense competition over the quality and design of the
product. This can lead to pressure on firms to improve
their products. This pressure will not exist under perfect
competition.
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MONOPOLY
Monopoly is at the opposite end of the spectrum of market
models from perfect competition. A monopoly firm has no
rivals. It is the only firm in its industry. There are no close
substitutes for the good or service a monopoly produces.
Not only does a monopoly firm have the market to itself,
but it also need not worry about other firms entering. In the
case of monopoly, entry by potential rivals is prohibitively
difficult.
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firm can enter that market. Such conditions are rare in the
real world. As always with models, we make the
assumptions that define monopoly in order to simplify our
analysis, not to describe the real world. The result is a
model that gives us important insights into the nature of
the choices of firms and their impact on the economy.
Barriers to entry
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that expanded its scale of operation to achieve an average
total cost curve such as ATC2 could produce 240 units of
output at a lower cost than could the smaller firms
producing 20 units each. By cutting its price below the
minimum average total cost of the smaller plants, the larger
firm could drive the smaller ones out of business. In this
situation, the industry demand is not large enough to
support more than one firm. If another firm attempted to
enter the industry, the natural monopolist would always be
able to undersell it.
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A firm with falling LRAC throughout the range of outputs
relevant to existing demand (D) will monopolize the
industry. Here, one firm operating with a large plant (ATC2)
produces 240 units of output at a lower cost than the $7
cost per unit of the 12 firms operating at a smaller scale
(ATC1), and producing 20 units of output each.
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firm will be able to undercut its price and drive it out of the
market.
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all diamond producers market their diamonds through de
Beers.
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Intimidation: The monopolist may resort to various forms
of harassment, legal or illegal, to drive a new entrant out of
business.
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profit greater) if there is no bus service to the same
destination.
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Monopoly and the Public Interest
Disadvantages of monopoly
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FIGURE 4.14 Equilibrium of the industry under perfect competition and
monopoly: with the same MC curve
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FIGURE 4.15 Dead weight loss due to Monopoly
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2. Productive Inefficiency: A firm is said to be productively
efficient if it produces at the minimum point of long-run
average cost. It is clear from the figure 11 that this is
extremely unlikely for a monopoly. The firm will produce
at the minimum point of long-run average cost only if it
so happens that the marginal revenue curve passes
through this exact point – and this would happen only by
coincidence. Under perfect competition, freedom of
entry eliminates supernormal profit and forces firms to
produce at the bottom of their LRAC curve. The effect,
therefore, is to keep long-run prices down. Under
monopoly, however, barriers to entry allow profits to
remain supernormal in the long run. The monopolist is
not forced to operate at the bottom of the AC curve.
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Advantages of Monopoly
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2. Possibility of Lower cost curves due to more research
and development and more investment: Although the
monopolist’s sheer survival does not depend on its
finding ever more efficient methods of production, it can
use part of its supernormal profits for research and
development and investment. Thus it has a greater ability
to become efficient than a small firm with limited funds.
Control of Monopoly
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2. Price controls: The government could set a price lower
than profit maximizing price. This has the effect of
changing the AR and MR curves of the monopolist. With
a fixed price PG , the demand curve above X becomes
perfectly elastic. This also makes the MR up till the point
X to be elastic. The best price for monopoly to set is
where the new MR is equal to the MC, which will happen
when PG, the new demand and MR curve is equal to MC
at point Y. Hence, the control price results in lower price
and higher output.
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3. Marginal Cost pricing: Under this method, the
monopolist is forced by the government to sell at P =
MC. If the regulated price is above average cost of
production, the business makes satisfying levels of
profits.
PG = MC and it is the
price at which the
monopoly sells
output QG.
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4. Natural Monopoly: In case of falling AC, where MC is
below AC, marginal cost pricing may result in the natural
monopoly to incur losses. The monopoly may eventually
shut down. In this case, the government may allow
average cost pricing to control monopoly.
At A: P = AC but P >
LRMC; therefore the
firm makes a profit.
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Monopoly and Price Discrimination
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selling World Cup t-shirts to tourists in a market. The
trader attempts to bargain with the tourists to sell each
shirt at the highest price that the tourist is prepared to
pay. If the trader is successful then, as we can see, on
that day the trader will sell one shirt at $14, one at $13,
one at $12, and so on. If the trader did not price
discriminate, then total revenue for the day would be the
shaded pale blue rectangle. However, by discriminating,
the trader has eliminated the consumer surplus of the
tourists and so the trader’s total revenue is the shaded
pale blue area plus the shaded dark blue triangle. Also,
since the extra revenue received from each shirt (the
marginal revenue) is equal to the price of the shirt, in this
case, D = MR.
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FIGURE 4.21 Second Degree price discrimination
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FIGURE 4.22 Third Degree price discrimination
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when MC=MR=$5, profits are maximized by charging a
price of $10.25 and attracting 325 adults.
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3. The producer must be able to separate the consumers,
so that they are not able to buy the product and then sell
it to another consumer. If this were not the case, then the
consumers who buy the product at a low price would
simply sell to those who were paying the higher price, at
a price below that one. This would destroy the ability of
the producer to practice price discrimination.
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Price Discrimination and the public interest
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raised. On the other hand, the higher profits may be
reinvested and lead to lower costs in the future.
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