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

slides-ioe-4

The document discusses price-based competition in industrial organization, focusing on the Bertrand model, which involves simultaneous price setting among firms producing homogeneous goods. It explains the implications of capacity constraints through the Bertrand-Edgeworth model and introduces the Dominant Firm model, where one firm leads in price setting while others follow. Key outcomes include zero profits in Bertrand competition and the conditions under which firms may set higher prices in the presence of capacity constraints.
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
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views

slides-ioe-4

The document discusses price-based competition in industrial organization, focusing on the Bertrand model, which involves simultaneous price setting among firms producing homogeneous goods. It explains the implications of capacity constraints through the Bertrand-Edgeworth model and introduces the Dominant Firm model, where one firm leads in price setting while others follow. Key outcomes include zero profits in Bertrand competition and the conditions under which firms may set higher prices in the presence of capacity constraints.
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
You are on page 1/ 31

INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATION

PRICE-BASED
COMPETITION
BERTRAND AND DOMINANT FIRM

Truong Dang Thuy


[email protected]
BERTRAND COMPETITION
SIMULTANEOUS PRICE SETTING
BERTRAND
COMPETITION ▪ Homogeneous goods/services
▪ Price competition, and consumers buy from cheaper firms
▪ No capacity constraints in production
▪ No product differentiation

Basic assumptions ▪ Firms simultaneously decide price


▪ No strategic collusion
BERTRAND ▪ Consider a duopoly, where Firm 1 and Firm 2 produce
identical products and compete by choosing price
COMPETITION simultaneously.
▪ The market demand
𝑄=𝑞 𝑃
where 𝑃 is price and 𝑄 the total quantity supplied.

Bertrand competition with ▪ Identical cost function of two firms


identical cost 𝐶 = 𝑐𝑞𝑖
where 𝑞𝑖 is the quantity of Firm 𝑖, (𝑖 = 1,2)
▪ Note the marginal cost is constant: 𝑚𝑐1 = 𝑚𝑐2 = 𝑐.
▪ Consumers will buy from the cheaper firm.
BERTRAND ▪ If Firm 1 sets 𝑝1 > 𝑐, Firm 2 can set 𝑝2 = 𝑝1 − 𝜖 and capture
the entire market
COMPETITION
▪ If Firm 1 will undercut in response.
▪ The process continues until 𝑝1 = 𝑝2 = 𝑐.
▪ Meaning zero profit and the market outcome is identical to
perfect competition. This is referred to as the Bertrand paradox.

▪ The two firms split the market equally, but no profit.


Bertrand competition with
identical cost ▪ The market demand can be introduced, which helps identify
the quantity at price 𝑐: 𝑄 = 𝑞 𝑐
▪ Two firms split the market equally
𝑞 𝑐
𝑞1 = 𝑞2 =
2
▪ Assume the market demand
𝑄 = 500 − 20𝑃
BERTRAND
where 𝑃 is price and 𝑄 the total quantity supplied.
COMPETITION
▪ The cost function of two firms
𝐶 = 10𝑞𝑖
where 𝑞𝑖 is the quantity of Firm 𝑖, (𝑖 = 1,2)
▪ The marginal cost is constant: 𝑚𝑐1 = 𝑚𝑐2 = 10.
Bertrand competition with Consider the following:
specific functional form
▪ What if the two firms set the same price 𝑝1 = 𝑝2 = 12?
▪ What if Firm 2 cuts its price to 𝑝2 = 11 while Firm 1 remains
its price?
▪ What if Firm 1 retaliates by cutting its price to 10.5?
BERTRAND
▪ In Bertrand competition, firms always have the incentive to
COMPETITION slightly undercut its rivals
▪ As a result, long-run equilibrium price is equal to the marginal
cost, and firms equally split the market with zero profit.
▪ The above is true even in the case of N firms.
▪ Note the above may be no longer true in case of
Summary ▪ product differentiation
▪ different marginal costs
▪ capacity constraints
BERTRAND-EDGEWORTH MODEL
SIMULTANEOUS PRICE SETTING WITH CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS
▪ Bertrand predicts price = marginal cost and zero profits, even
BERTRAND-EDGEWORTH with just two firms
MODEL ▪ Real-world firms often face capacity constraints
▪ Edgeworth (1897) extended the model: firms cannot serve
unlimited demand
▪ Bertrand-Edgeworth model take all the assumptions of the
Bertrand competition, except:
▪ each firm can only sell up to its capacity
Motivation and assumptions ▪ consumers buy from the cheapest firm first
▪ if one firm’s capacity is exhausted, consumers buy from the next
cheapest firm
▪ if both prices are equal, they split demand, constrained by
capacity
▪ Consider a duopoly, where Firm 1 and Firm 2 produce
BERTRAND-EDGEWORTH identical products and compete by choosing price
simultaneously.
MODEL
▪ The market demand
𝑄=𝑞 𝑃
where 𝑃 is price and 𝑄 the total quantity supplied.
▪ Firms decide 𝑝1 , 𝑝2 simultaneously
Bertrand competition with ▪ Identical cost function of two firms
capacity constraint 𝐶 = 𝑐𝑞𝑖 𝑖 = 1,2
▪ Capacity constraints
▪ Firm 1 can produce at most 𝐾1
▪ Firm 2 can produce at most 𝐾2
If 𝑝1 < 𝑝2 , then
▪ Firm 1 sells
𝑞1 = min 𝐾1 , 𝑞 𝑝1
BERTRAND-EDGEWORTH
▪ Firms 2 sells
MODEL 𝑞2 = min 𝐾2 , max 𝑞 𝑝2 − 𝑞1 , 0
▪ If 𝑞 𝑝1 < 𝐾1 , the constraint is not binding, and
▪ Firm 1 sells 𝑞1 = 𝑞 𝑝1 , captures the whole market,
▪ Firm 2 sells nothing.
▪ If 𝑞 𝑝1 > 𝐾1 , the constraint is binding, and
▪ Firm 1 sells 𝑞1 = 𝐾1 , leaving some potential residual demand for
Market allocation if 𝑝1 < 𝑝2 Firm 2
▪ If Firm 2 sets 𝑝2 such that 𝑞 𝑝2 − 𝑞1 < 0, it sells nothing
▪ Otherwise if 𝑞 𝑝2 − 𝑞1 > 0, it sells
▪ 𝑞2 = 𝑞 𝑝2 − 𝑞1 if the residual demand is within capacity
constraint, or 𝑞 𝑝2 − 𝑞1 < 𝐾2
▪ 𝑞2 = 𝐾2 if this residual demand is greater than the capacity
constraint 𝑞 𝑝2 − 𝑞1 > 𝐾2
If 𝑝1 > 𝑝2 , the reverse logic applies
▪ Now Firm 2 sells first
𝑞2 = min 𝐾2 , 𝑞 𝑝2
BERTRAND-EDGEWORTH
▪ Firms 1 sells the residual
MODEL 𝑞1 = min 𝐾1 , max 𝑞 𝑝1 − 𝑞2 , 0
▪ If 𝑞 𝑝2 < 𝐾2 , the constraint is not binding, and
▪ Firm 2 sells 𝑞2 = 𝑞 𝑝2 , captures the whole market,
▪ Firm 1 sells nothing.
▪ If 𝑞 𝑝2 > 𝐾2 , the constraint is binding, and
▪ Firm 2 sells 𝑞2 = 𝐾2 , leaving some potential residual demand for
Market allocation if 𝑝1 > 𝑝2 Firm 1
▪ If Firm 1 sets 𝑝1 such that 𝑞 𝑝1 − 𝑞2 < 0, it sells nothing
▪ Otherwise if 𝑞 𝑝1 − 𝑞2 > 0, it sells
▪ 𝑞1 = 𝑞 𝑝1 − 𝑞2 if the residual demand is within capacity
constraint, or 𝑞 𝑝1 − 𝑞2 < 𝐾1
▪ 𝑞1 = 𝐾1 if this residual demand is greater than the capacity
constraint 𝑞 𝑝1 − 𝑞2 > 𝐾1
BERTRAND-EDGEWORTH If 𝑝1 = 𝑝2 = 𝑝, there are one million possibilities ☺
▪ Case A: If 𝑞 𝑝 > 𝐾1 + 𝐾2
MODEL 𝑞1 = 𝐾1 𝑞2 = 𝐾2
▪ Case B: If 𝑞 𝑝 < 𝐾1 + 𝐾2 , there are 3 possibilities
▪ B1: No constraint for both, then equally splitting the demand
𝑞 𝑝 𝑞 𝑝
≤ min 𝐾1 , 𝐾2 , then 𝑞1 = 𝑞2 =
2 2
▪ B2: Constrant for Firm 1
Market allocation if 𝑝1 = 𝑝2 𝑞 𝑝 𝑞 𝑝
> 𝐾1 and < 𝐾2 , then 𝑞1 = 𝐾1 and 𝑞2 = 𝑞 𝑝 − 𝐾1
2 2
▪ B2: Constraint on Firm 2
𝑞 𝑝 𝑞 𝑝
< 𝐾1 and > 𝐾2 , then 𝑞2 = 𝐾2 and 𝑞1 = 𝑞 𝑝 − 𝐾2
2 2
BERTRAND-EDGEWORTH

MODEL ▪ Each firm profit is


𝜋𝑖 = 𝑝𝑖 − 𝑐 𝑞𝑖
▪ This means that firms may choose higher prices if:
▪ they expect the rival’s capacity to be exhausted, and
▪ they can still serve residual demand at a higher price
Profit ▪ In some cases, the firm with higher price has lower demanded
quantity but earns higher profit.
▪ Assume the market demand
𝑄 = 500 − 20𝑃
BERTRAND-EDGEWORTH where 𝑃 is price and 𝑄 the total quantity supplied.
MODEL ▪ Firms decide 𝑝1 , 𝑝2 simultaneously
▪ Identical cost function of two firms
𝐶 = 10𝑞𝑖 𝑖 = 1,2
▪ Identical capacity constraints
▪ Firm 1 can produce at most 150
▪ Firm 2 can produce at most 150
Example Consider the following:
▪ What if both firms set prices at 𝑝1 = 𝑝2 = 12?
▪ What happen if Firm 1 cut its price to 11.5?
▪ Does Firm 1 really need to cut to 11.5, or should it just set at,
say, 11.9?
THE DOMINANT FIRM MODEL
PRICE LEADERSHIP
▪ Brief history
▪ Developed in early 20th century to explain real-world
DOMINANT FIRM oligopolies
MODEL ▪ Formalized in the 1930s–1950s by economists like Heinrich von
Stackelberg and George Stigler

▪ Market structure: two firms, one acts as the price leader, the
other follows (follower).
▪ Key assumptions:
▪ Firms aim to maximize profit
Basic assumptions ▪ Leader assumes followers will match its price
▪ Followers are price takers within the leader’s price decision
▪ No retaliation from followers (no price wars)
▪ Demand and cost structures are known or estimable by the
leader
▪ Two firms:
DOMINANT FIRM ▪ Firm 1 (leader): large, sets price to maximize profit
▪ Firm 2 (follower): small, takes price as given and maximize
MODEL profit

▪ The follower must take price as given:


▪ If it sets higher price, it sells nothing
▪ If it sets lower price, it sells up to its capacity constraint
▪ Given that the follower is small, the market price should not be
affected even if the follower set lower price
Model setup ▪ If the follower set lower price and can affect the market price, it
become the leader. Or this somehow becomes the Bertrand
competition

▪ So we go with the assumption that the follower is the price


taker.
▪ The cost functions of the two firms
DOMINANT FIRM 𝑐𝐿 = 𝑐𝐿 𝑞𝐿
MODEL 𝑐𝐹 = 𝑐𝐹 (𝑞𝐹 )
▪ The inverse demand function
𝑃 = 𝐷 −1 𝑄
where 𝑄 is the total supply of the leader (𝑞𝐿 ) and follower (𝑞𝐹 ),
or 𝑄 = 𝑞𝐿 + 𝑞𝐹
▪ The corresponding demand is 𝑄 = 𝐷 𝑃
Model setup
▪ Example: if the demand function is 𝑄 = 𝐷 𝑃 = 𝑎 − 𝑏𝑃, the
inverse demand function is
−1
𝑎−𝑄
𝑃=𝐷 𝑄 =
𝑏
▪ Suppose the Leader set the price 𝑃
DOMINANT FIRM ▪ As a price taker, the follower chooses the output level that
MODEL maximize profit
max 𝜋𝐹 𝑞𝐹 = 𝑃𝑞𝐹 − 𝑐𝐹 𝑞𝐹
𝑞𝐹

▪ The FOC is familiar:


𝑃 = 𝑚𝑐𝐹 𝑞𝐹
▪ We can obtain the follower’s output supply function in the
form
The Follower’s problem 𝑞𝐹 = 𝑆𝐹 𝑃
▪ Note: the follower supplies only if 𝑃 ≥ 𝑚𝑐𝐹
▪ Exercise: Assume a linear demand function 𝑄 = 𝑞 − 𝑏𝑃 and
2
𝑞𝐹
𝑐𝐹 = . Solve for the follower’s output supply function.
2
▪ The residual demand for the Leader is
𝑞𝐿 = 𝐷 𝑃 − 𝑆𝐹 𝑃
DOMINANT FIRM ▪ With a specific functional form, we can invert the above
function to get the corresponding inverse residual demand
MODEL 𝑃 = 𝑃 𝑞𝐿
▪ The Leader’s profit function
𝜋𝐿 = 𝑃 𝑞𝐿 𝑞𝐿 − 𝑐𝐿 𝑞𝐿
▪ The FOC:
𝑀𝑅𝐿 = 𝑀𝐶𝐿
The Leader’s problem ▪ The Leader takes the residual demand and acts as a
monopoly.
▪ Once it chooses optimal output, it also chooses optimal
price
▪ Exercise: assume 𝑐𝐿 = 𝑐𝑞𝐿 , solve for the optimal price 𝑃 and
𝑞𝐿∗ .
DOMINANT FIRM ▪ Leader sets price 𝑃 and choose 𝑞𝐿∗ that maximize profit, after
MODEL considering the response from Follower
▪ The leader internalizes the follower’s response and prices
strategically

▪ Follower takes price 𝑃 and choose 𝑞𝐹∗ that maximize profit.


▪ The follower is a price taker, supplying only if price covers
marginal cost

Equilibrium ▪ At the equilibrium


▪ price is above competitive level, but below monopoly level
▪ there is asymmetric market power with one firm leading and
others following
DOMINANT FIRM
MODEL

Example with specific


functional form
DOMINANT FIRM ▪ Assume a linear demand function
MODEL 𝑄 = 𝑎 − 𝑏𝑃
▪ The inverse demand is thus
𝑎−𝑄
𝑃=
𝑏
▪ And the cost function
▪ Leader:
Example with specific 𝑐𝐿 = 𝑐𝑞𝐿
functional form ▪ Follower:
𝑐𝐹 = 𝑑𝑞𝐹2
▪ Note that the Follower is less efficient.
DOMINANT FIRM ▪ Suppose the Leader set price 𝑃, the follower’s problem is
MODEL max 𝜋𝐹 𝑞𝐹 = 𝑃𝑞𝐹 − 𝑑𝑞𝐹2
𝑞𝐹

▪ The FOC:
𝑃 = 2𝑑𝑞𝐹
▪ So the Follower’s ouput supply function is
𝑃
𝑞𝐹 = 𝑆𝐹 𝑃 =
Example with specific 2𝑑
functional form ▪ The profit
𝑃2
𝜋𝐹 =
4𝑑
▪ The residual demand for the Leader:
𝑞𝐿 = 𝐷 𝑃 − 𝑆𝐹 𝑃
𝑃 1
𝑞𝐿 = 𝑎 − 𝑏𝑃 − =𝑎− 𝑏+ 𝑃
2𝑑 2𝑑
DOMINANT FIRM 1
▪ The demand facing Leader is 𝑞𝐿 = 𝑎 − 𝑏 + 2𝑑 𝑃. The inverse demand is
MODEL 𝑎 − 𝑞𝐿
𝑃=
1
𝑏+
2𝑑
▪ The Leader’s profit function is then
𝑎 − 𝑞𝐿
𝜋𝐿 = 𝑞 − 𝑐𝑞𝐿
1 𝐿
𝑏+
2𝑑
Example with specific ▪ The FOC is
functional form 𝑎 − 2𝑞𝐿
=𝑐
1
𝑏+
2𝑑
▪ So the Leader’s ouput supply function is
1
𝑎−𝑐 𝑏+
𝑞𝐿 = 2𝑑
2
DOMINANT FIRM ▪ Once Leader decides output, it also decides the price because
MODEL 𝑎 − 𝑞𝐿
𝑃=
1
𝑏+
2𝑑
1
𝑎−𝑐 𝑏+
▪ Substitute 𝑞𝐿 = 2𝑑
into the above equation to yield the
2
market price
Example with specific
functional form ▪ The Leader’s profit
2
1 1
𝜋𝐿 = 𝑎−𝑐 𝑏+
1 2𝑑
4 𝑏+
2𝑑
DOMINANT FIRM
MODEL ▪ Assume a linear demand function
𝑄 = 180 − 1.75𝑃
▪ The inverse demand is thus
180 − 𝑄
𝑃=
1.75
Example with specific ▪ And the cost function
functional form 𝑐𝐿 = 10𝑞𝐿
𝑐𝐹 = 2𝑞𝐹2
DOMINANT FIRM
MODEL ▪ The follower’s MC is
𝑀𝐶𝐹 = 4𝑞𝐹
▪ So when ever the Leader set the price 𝑃, it knows that the
Follower’s ouput supply is
𝑃
𝑞𝐹 =
4
Example with specific ▪ The follower’s profit
functional form 𝑃2
𝜋𝐹 =
8
▪ The residual demand for the Leader:
𝑃
DOMINANT FIRM 𝑞𝐿 = 180 − 1.75𝑃 − = 180 − 2𝑃
4
MODEL ▪ The inverse demand is
180 − 𝑞𝐿
𝑃=
2
▪ The Leader’s profit function is then
180 − 𝑞𝐿 𝑞𝐿
𝜋𝐿 = − 10𝑞𝐿
2
Example with specific ▪ The FOC is
functional form 180 − 2𝑞𝐿
= 10
2
▪ So the Leader’s ouput supply function is 𝑞𝐿 = 80
180−𝑞𝐿 180−80
▪ The price is 𝑃 = = = 50
2 2
DOMINANT FIRM
MODEL
▪ Given that 𝑃 = 50, 𝑞𝐿 = 55 and 𝑞𝐹 = 12.5 (why?), the profits
are:
▪ Leader: 𝜋𝐿 = 3,200
▪ Follower: 𝜋𝐹 = 312.5

▪ What if at 𝑃 = 12.5, the follower choose an output level


Example with specific different from 12.5?
functional form
▪ What if the Leader choose a price level different from 50?

You might also like