MicroEcon Tri #2
Barriers to Enter a Monopoly
(1): Economies of Scale (2): Network Effects (3): Gov grants: patents, licensing (4): Exclusive ownership of Inputs (ex: Natural Resources)
Moral Hazard Solutions
(1): Signaling (2): Screening - sort people by characteristics rental cars based on age FICO credit score for loans background check for employment
1914 Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
- birthed FTC - regulate advertising - "the referee" of all business practices
Food & Drug Administration (FDA)
1906: regulates food and drugs... (everything consumed except supplements and vitamins)
FTC
1914: began regulating advertising, now regulate everything; "REFEREE"
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
1965: developed the interview process & prevents systematic BIAS
OSHA
1970: WORKER SAFETY - window space, ladder safeties, pregnancy rules, providing drinking water, etc.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
1970: regulates POLLUTION - oil spills, fires, etc.
Consumer Product Safety Comission (CPSC)
1972: ensures consumer safety when purchasing products -toys, little parts, RECALLS, lawnmowers
Disadvantages of Advertising
1: Persuasion / Exaggeration; fantasy 2: Ad expenses are relatively unproductive 3: Negative Externalities (we buy more because of ads) 4: Ads don't help the public, they're just for market share 5: Can be a barrier to enter (ads are expensive)
Advantages of Advertising
1: Provides useful information 2: Supports the media (allows free services to exist) 3: Stimulates new product development 4: Can contribute to economies of scale 5: Promotes competition
Robinson-Patman Act (1936)
Law on price discrimination, high standard, most firms are found not guilty - no lower costs & harm to competition = guilty
Cartel
a combination of firms that operate as one; a shared monopoly; illegal in the US
Public Good
a nonexclusive good, no one can be excluded
Dominant Strategy
a preferred strategy regardless of opponents choices
Herfindahl Index
adding the squared value of all the individual market shares - 1500 or less: allow merge - 1500-2000: yellow light - over 2000: NO, red light
Moral Hazard Problem
arises when people don't bear the negative consequences of their actions
Price Discriminate
charge different prices to different people/groups ex: Senior, student, military discount
Sequential Game
decisions are made one after another; one player 'responds'
Externalities
effects of a decision on a 3rd party, not taken into account by the decision maker
Clayton Act (1914)
expands & clarifies Sherman, banned tying contracts (unless truly needed), banned serving as a director for two companies in the same industry
Price Taker & Why?
firm or individual takes the market price as given Why? (1) undifferentiated product (2) relatively easy to enter/exit the market
X-inefficiency
firms operating far less effective than they could; expected in monopolies
Lazy Monopolists
firms that do not push for efficiency; comfortable in their current position
Game Theory
formal economic reasoning applied to interdependent decisions (OLIGOPOLIES)
Maximin
lowest, worst-case scenario if you make a certain decision; what keeps managers employed
Implicit Collusion
multiple firms make the same pricing decisions even though they have NOT consulted w each other / colluded
Adverse Selection Problem
occurs when buyers and sellers have different amounts of information about the good for sale
Pure Monopoly
often a government program, USPS or DMV
Simultaneous Game
players make their decisions at the same time; can't change your answer
Technological Lock-In
prior use of technology makes adapting new technologies more difficult
Sherman Act (1890)
prohibits monopolizing trade, exclusive dealings, and predatory pricing (setting low to eliminate comp, then raise; illegal)
Natural Monopoly
single firm can operate more efficiently/cheaper than 2 or more; heavily regulated to uphold quality
Strategic Decision Making
taking explicit account of a rivals expected response to your decisions; characteristic of OLIGOPOLIES
Concentration Ratio
value of sales by the top firms of an industry stated as a percentage of the total industry sales; - oligopoly usually above 75% - monopolistic competition: low %
Shutdown Point
when the firm would be better off to temporarily shut down than continue operations; ** when AVC > MR **
Nash Equilibrium
where no player can improve payoffs by unilaterally changing their strategy
Contestable Market Model
where the barriers to enter/exit determine a firms price & output decisions