Market Structures
Natural Monopoly
A monopoly created and sustained by economies of scale
Perfectly Competitive Industry
Firms are price takers Consumers can only be perfectly competitive only if consumers regard the product from all firms equivalent.
Market Structure is based on 2 Dimensions
The number of firms in the market Whether goods offered are identical or differential
4 Types of Barriers to Entry
Monopoly Control of a scarce resource or input Economies of scale Technological superiority Government-created barrier
Imperfect Competition
This creates a situation in which firms compete but also possess market power
Economies of Scale
Advantage for larger firms; as output grows, cost decreases For markets with high cost, it is better to produce in high cost so firms can lower the ATC Newcomer firms have a hard time to enter
Price in Competitive Market
As low as it can be Everything is identical - need to have lower price Both firms and consumers are Price - takers Free Entry & Exit
Monopolies if the were were no laws?
Barriers to entry prevents firms to enter the market Hard for other firms to enter the certain market
standardized products or commodities
products consumers regard as the same good even if they come from different firms Necessary to be a competitive production
Technological Superiority
Typically not a barrier to entry over the long term
Interpret HHI
Bunch of small # squared < few big # squared More firms there are, smaller the HHI is If we just add, the whole percentage will be almost 100 for all types of firm
How do we measure market power
Concentration ratio herfindahl-hirschman index (HHI)
Characteristic of Monopolistic
Each producer has some ability to set price of his/her differentiated product; they can raise their price because firms can differentiate their product Free entry and exit in long term Prices tend to be lower
Oligarchy
Few firms - more than one but not a large number - sell products that may be either identical or differentiated Few companies that dominate the market ex) Coke, Cell phone carrier, tablets, high-tech
Market Power
Firms have some choice over price Their decisions about how much to produce affect the market price
Price Taker Firms
Firms need to be numerous and relatively small
Market Share
For market to be competitive, no one firm should have a large market share fraction of the total industry output accounted for by that firm's output.
Differential Goods
Goods that are different but considered at least somewhat substitutable for consumers When consumers think the product is special, sellers can have a differentiated product
Control of a scarce resource or input
If one firm has control over a resource or input crucial to an industry, it can prevent other firms from entering its market.
Free Entry and Exit
In Competitive Market, in theory, it should be easy to enter and exit the market
Monopolistic Competition
Many firms each sell a differentiated product (for example, producers of economics textbooks) Between oligarchy and Perfect competition ex) Make up, potato chips, Free entry and exit in long term
Perfect Competition
Many firms each sell identical products Many sellers selling one same product ex) closest perfect competition is agricultural products
4 Primary Models of Market Structure
Monopoly Oligarchy Monopolistic Competition Perfect Competition
Oligopoly
Oligopoly have some market power Prices are little high
Government Created Barriers
Patents and Copyrights Reserved right for certain amount of time Promote creativity/ provide incentive
Price Taker
Perfect Competition; firms and consumers' actions cannot affect the market price of the good or service it sells. neither consumption decisions by individual consumers nor production decisions by individual producers affect the market price of the good.
Monopoly
Single fiems sells single product ex) Duke Energy in South East (geographically limited), electricity, water Government regulates the price
Concentration Ratio
measure the percentage of industry sales accounted for by the "X" largest firms, where "X" can equal any number of firms Percentage of total sales of the biggest firms bigger the percentage, morel likely to be oligopoly
HHI
square of each firm's share of market sales summed over the firms in the industry; bigger the #, less competitive For example, if an industry contains only three firms and their market shares are 60%, 25%, and 15%, the HHI for the industry is: HHI = 60^2 + 25^2 + 15^2 = 4,450