ECON 101 EXAM 3
Barrier to Entry Strategy #2: Supply-Side and Cost Advantages
A. Learning by doing means that experience yields efficiency gains -you can streamline to make production for efficient B. Economies of scale -mass production is more efficient than producing small quantities -difficult and costly for newcomers to establish mass prodution C. Research and development can create cost advantages -make existing products more cheaply -develop more effective management techniques D. relationships with suppliers can get you cheaper inputs -bulk discounts E. Access to key inputs can freeze you competitors out
Barrier to entry strategy #3 : regulation and government policy
A. Patents - no company can use your idea without your permission -automatically creates monopoly -alternative: keep invention a secret B. Regulation -can make it difficult to start a new business -incumbent business often lobby for more regulation C. Licensing -businesses need government-issued license to enter a market -if licenses are scarce or costly, can deter entry --examples: taxis, liquor stores, childcare centers, many occupations
Barrier to Entry Strategy #1:Demand-Side Advantages
A. Switching costs lock your customers in o Any impediment that makes it difficult or costly for customers to switch to buying from another business. Examples: iPhone apps, camera lenses, frequent flyer miles, bank bill-pay service B. Reputation and goodwill keep your customers loyal. o Build a good reputation, develop relationships. Examples: Doctors, mechanics, plumbers, electricians C. Network effects o Product becomes more useful the more others use it.o Consumers will only use popular products. → Helps incumbents. Can lead bad products to succeed Examples: WhatsApp, Amazon reviews, eBay, StubHub, car repair networks, Windows, QWERTY keyboards31
Market Power vs Perfect Competition
A. market power: set quantity by producing until marginal revenue = marginal cost, then set price by looking up to the firm demand curve B. perfect competition : keep producing until price = marginal cost
Rivals Exiting Makes Your Market More Profitable11Price Firm demand curveQuantity demanded
Effect of exit of existing firms for incumbents: 1. Increased demand o Gain some customers from the exiting firm. o Shifts demand curve right(↑quantity for each price). 2. Increases your market power.o Customers have fewer choices. o Demand curve becomes steeper.
New Competitors Make Your Market Less Profitable
Effect of new entrants on incumbents: 1. Decreased demand o Lose some existing customers to the new firm. o Shifts demand curve left(↓ quantity for each price). 2. Reduces your market power o Customers have more choices. o Demand curve becomes flatter.
Policymaker
Eliminate barriers to entry. o Want to maximize economic surplus o Enhance competition o Requires free entry o More competition translates int o lowerprices and profits Yielding a higher quantity Offsetting the underproduction problem Increasing economic surplus Role for gov't to try to foster and enhance competition
cost advantages generate lasting economic profits
Marginal principle says the last firm that enters a market will earn zero economic profit. o If your costs are lower than the costs of the marginal firm, you can continue to earn economic profits Cost advantages can deter entry.o New firms won't enter a market to compete with a low-cost incumbent in a price wa
smaller quantity is not best for society
Socially optimal outcomeMarginal benefit = Marginal cost o Perfect competition achieves this:Price = Marginal cost o Market power yields a different outcome:Marginal revenue = Marginal cost
enter the market if
accounting profits> implicit opportunity costs implies: enter if economic profit > 0
non-price competition
attract "sticky" customers through product differentiation : different features, quality, customer service, design, etc
Economic profits in the short run
average revenue: a firm's total revenue divided by quantity supplied -if you charge all customers the same price: average revenue = price
Accounting profits:
The total revenue your firmreceives, minus your total costs. o All of the money that goes into and out of a business. o Focused only on out-of-pocket costs.
Free entry
eliminates positive economic profit in the long run o If economic profits are positive : New firms enter (or existing firms expand) Causing profits of incumbents to fall o Continues until there is no incentive fornew firms to enter. o Equilibrium: Economic profits = 0
free exit
ensures industries won't remain unprofitable in the long run o If economic profits are negative: Existing firms exit (or contract) Causing profits of remaining firms to riseo Continues until there is no incentive forfirms to exit.o Equilibrium: Economic profits = 0
when will new rivals enter your market - OC
enter this market "or what?" -or earn a reasonable return on time and money from investing in another industry -"implicit opportunity costs"
conflicting interests in barriers to entry
entrepreneurs: build barriers to entry policymaker: eliminate barriers to entry
If economic profit is becoming negative
expect firms to exit your market
measuring your market power
experiment with different prices -charge different prices over time, charge different prices in different locations, offer different prices to different groups of customers
Firms with market power
face a downward sloping demand curve
collusion
firms in the same market cooperate to raise profits
The firm's cost structure
focus on quantity -average costs- the firm will decide on a quantity Q to produce, the how much question that is answered by considering MB >= MC -Average fixed costs always decreases with output -Average variable cost - increasing with output at the profit maximizing quantity -Average cost - relevant for understanding the profit associated with any Q
Importance of barriers to entry
free entry: long run economic profits are zero == long run profitability depends on barriers to entry
experience good
good which you have to consume in order to evaluate -use persuasive advertising
Location Choices also affects Price Competition
if you locate right next to your rival -you are selling an identical product -remember bertrand paradox: price competition will drive profit margins to zero -locating far from rivals = product differentiation
exit the market if
implicit opportunity costs > accounting profits implies: exit if economic profit < 0
Free Entry Eliminates Profit Opportunities
in the long run -all supermarket lines are the same length o Profit opportunity: One queue is shorter o Free entry to "profitable" (shorter) queues continues until no queue is profitable (shorter) -All labor markets offer similar job prospects. o Profit opportunity: New York's labor market offers better prospects o Free entry by workers to "profitable" labor markets continues until no labor market offers better prospects -All nightclubs offer similar romantic prospects o Profit opportunity: A nightclub offers better romantic prospects(Perhaps because of an asymmetric gender ratio) o Free entry by those looking for romance continues until no nightclub offers better romantic prospects
informative advertising
informs potential customers about a product
keep selling until
marginal revenue = marginal cost
Price discrimination sets prices just below marginal benefit
o Charge higher prices to high marginal-benefit customers. o Offer selective discounts to low marginal-benefit customers.
barriers to entry
obstacles that make it difficult for new firms to enter a market -not naturally occurring defenses -barriers to entry are shaped by incumbent firms
Non-Price Competition Yields Market Power
offer a product that better serves the needs of some customers
monopoly
only one seller -raising prices : won't lose customers to competitors -market demand curve = firm demand curve -downward sloping demand curve
persuasive advertising
persuades or manipulates potential customers into believing they will enjoy a product -usually not informative -fragrance ads
in the long run
price = average cost -if price > average cost --economic profit > 0 --new firms enter --price falls --process continues until economic profit = 0 -if price < average cost --economic profit < 0 --existing firms exit --price rises -process continues until economic profit = 0x
businesses with market power can increase profits through
price discrimination
prevent resale
price discrimination doesn't work if discounted products can be resold at higher price -successful price discrimination requires preventing resale
If you only compete on price your profits are easily driven to zero
price war continues until price equals marginal cost example: the market for gas - two stations across the street from each other
price discrimination redistributes and increases economic surplus
producers: -gain producer surplus from consumers from charging higher prices -create extra producer surplus from increasing the size of the market consumers: -lose consumer surplus to producers from higher prices -gain small amounts of consumer surplus from increasing the size of the market
firm profits depend on
profit for a unit sold depends on it its price and its cost -Fixed Costs - Any productive input that doesn'tincrease when output increases (storefronts, factories,super expensive equipment) -Variable Costs - Any productive input that does scale with output (raw materials or "parts", workers, packaging and shipping) total cost = fixed costs + variable costs
output effect
sell one more unit, the revenue increases by the price of the additional item sold
price discrimination
selling the same good at different prices
price discrimination: the pink tax
some retailers charge more for products marketed to women -unlikely due to higher marginal costs -likely due to price discrimination -some cities and states ban price discrimination based on gender
market power is defined as
the ability for a firm to incrementally increase prices without losing a substantial number of customers
Market power
the ability to raise prices without losing too many customers to competitors o The more market power you have, the greater your profits
Focus on marginal revenue
the addition to total revenue you get from selling one more unit
how do you suspect the demand curve for amazon changed during the pandemic
the demand curve became steeper
the next best alternatives determine the range of possible outcomes
the final price must be: -higher than the seller's next best alternative and lower than the buyers next best alternative example: Your current job pays $75,000 and Google can hire someone else for the job for $100,000
short run
the horizon over which the production capacity and the number and type of competitors you face cannot change -our implicit assumption in previous classes -number and type of competitors is fixed -pricing decisions
long run
the horizon over which you or your rivals may expand or contract your production capacity, and new rivals may enter the market, or existing firms may exit -new rivals may enter or expand into your market; existing rivals may leave -planning decisions
reservation price
the maximum price a buyer will pay for a product
the better your next best alternative
the more bargaining power you have
discount effect
to sell one more unit, you have to lower the price on all units sold.
next best alternative
value of the best option, outside of the deal -the or what from the opportunity cost principle
Bertrand Paradox
with no product differentiation, even one competitor can force your economic profits to zero problem: there is an irresistible incentive for your rival to undercut you -demand is perfectly elastic (perfect competition) solution: product differentiation reduces the incentive for your rival to undercut you -less elastic demanded reduces the incentive for your rival to undercut your price
why do suppliers choose to underproduce
-Businesses worry about the discount effect. --Lower prices are bad for their bottom line. -But the discount effect is irrelevant from society's perspective. --Lower prices merely transfer surplus from sellers to buyers. -discounts are like a positive externality for buyers, which businesses don't internalize
Four strategies for creating barriers to entry
1. Demand-side strategies: Find ways to create customer lock-in. 2. Supply-side strategies: Develop unique cost advantages. 3. Regulation: Mobilize the government to prevent entry. 4. Deterrence strategies: Scare away potential entrants with credible threats
Market power examples
-HIV drugs and daraprim -price is much greater than the marginal cost of producing these drugs -the price of prison phone calls
the underproduction problem
-Higher prices under market power are a problem for consumers, but an off-setting benefit to producer - results in redistribution, not loss in economic surplus - not socially optimal
quantity discounts are a form of group discount
-discount on a second pizza is only offered to those who have already bought a first pizza -targets those with a lower willingness to pay
Force #3 Competitors in Other Markets: Threat of Substitution
-firms in other industries may produce products that are potential substitutes for yours -think expansively --potential substitutes can come from unrelated industries --other substitutes include : buying second-hand, making something yourself , doing without --threat of disruption: cheaper nearly as good alternative -substitutes presents a larger threat when customers have low switching costs
ensure competition thrives
-government outlaws some strategies that create market power
Force #1Existing Competitors: Type and Intensity of Competition
-a rivalry is more intense when more competitors are producing similar goods -type of competition --price comp: repeated rounds of comp will lower your profits --non-price comp: firms compete through product differentiation
Threat #4 Suppliers: Seller Bargaining Power
-ability of suppliers to charge high prices depends on their bargaining power
Force #5 Customers: buyer bargaining power
-buyers can force you to lower prices
what does advertising do
-creates product differentiation -increases demand for you product (shift demand curve right) -makes customers more loyal, gain market power (steepens demand curve)
The product position trade-off
-demand-side: want to be close to your competitor --increase your share of potential customers --increase quantity -supply-side : want to be far from your competitor --increase market power and prices --increase profit margin -real world entrepreneurs choose product positioning to balance these factors
Lobbying is often about erecting barriers to entry
-lobbying is an enormous industry -involves incumbent businesses -losers from barriers to entry are rarely represented --consumers, potential entrants
perfect competition
-many buyers - each is small relative to the market -many firms - each is small relative to the market -identical goods -no market power -buyers and sellers are price-takers
offer group discounts to those with low reservation prices
-movie theaters, software, books, internet service, dry cleaners, hairdressers
Force #2 Potential Competitors: Threat of Entry
-new entry can increase supply and intensify comp -strategic management can deter entry
Preventing monopolization
-not illegal to be a monopoly --hold and exploit market power over consumers --charge high prices -it is illegal to attempt to monopolize. take actions to exclude competitors or prevent new competition
market power depends on
-number of competitors -successful product differentiation
minimize harm from exercising market power
-regulating maximum prices --set price = marginal cost implication: -perfectly competitive markets: price caps reduce economic surplus -imperfectly competitive markets: price caps can increase economic surplus
determinants of long-term profitability
-type and intensity of competitive forces -decisions you make in response to these forces
making price and quantity decisions with market power
1. Choose your quantity: o Keep producing until Marginal revenue = Marginal cost o Look down to see the quantity 2. Choose your price: o Set the highest price at which you can sell this quantity. o Look up to the demand curve to find the highest price you can charge to sell this quantity
Your Firm's Market power depends on
1. How few competitiors you face (market exit and entry) 2. How successfully you differentiate your product from others (Marketing-make your product different)
Entry deterrence strategy: build excess capacity
1. build more production capacity than you need -show you have the capacity to increase production and flood the market 2. maintain a financial war chest -show that you could sustain a price war for longer than your rival 3. brand proliferation -produce many varieties -ensures that there is no gap in the market 4. develop a reputation for competing hard with new entrants -a fierce reputation scares competitors away -as your reputation becomes more valuable, rivals understand that you will fight even harder to defend it
Set Prices Close to Each Customer's Marginal Benefit
1. charge higher prices to high customers with high reservation prices 2. Charge lower prices to customers with low reservation prices
Five Forces Framework
1. potential competitors 2. current competitors 3. customers 4. potential substitues 5. suppliers
offering group discounts
1. targeted at groups with a lower reservation price 2. qualify for discount based on verifiable characteristics 3. qualifying characteristics that are hard to change
Competition yields lower prices and higher quantity
1. the competitive price is lower than the market power price 2. the competitive quantity is greater than the market power quantity 3. a firm with market power earns greater profits 4. market power can raise costs
how to price discriminate
1. who gets a discount 2. everyone wants to pay a lower price
marginal revenue vs firm demand curve
1. your firm's demand curve is downward sloping reflecting you market power 2. marginal revenue lies below the demand curve reflecting the discount effect 3. marginal revenue is steeper, declining more rapidly -the discount effect is bigger, the larger the quantity you sell
Entrepreneur
Build barriers to entry. o Want to maximize firmprofits o Enhance market power o Requires high barriers to entry o More market power translates into higher prices and profits But lower quantity Exacerbating the underproduction problem Reducing economic surplus tendency for business to try to destroy competiton
When Will Existing Rivals Exit Your Market?- CB
Cost benefit principle: Exit the market if the benefits exceed the costs o Benefit: Invest your time and money in another industry o Cost: What is the cost of exiting this market?
Barrier to entry strategy #4 : entry deterrence
Goal: convince potential rivals that if they enter you will compete so vigorously that they will lose money -credibility problem: "cheap talk" -your rival understands this lack of credibility * entry deterrence strategies are all about how best to make you threat credible to potential rivals
search good
Good which you can evaluate before buying. -use informative advertising
when will new rivals enter your market - CB
cost benefit principle: enter a market if the benefits exceed the costs -benefit: the extra money you will earn -accounting profits: revenues - explicit costs
in the real world, all of the action is
IMPERFECT COMPETITION
The hurdle method
Offer lower prices only to buyers who are willing to overcome some hurdle -key idea: set the hurdle so that high reservation price customers will find it too costly -yields self-selection
When Will Existing Rivals Exit Your Market?- OC
Opportunity cost principle: Exit this market, "orwhat?" o Or enjoy the accounting profits offered in this market
bargaining power
Your ability to negotiate a better deal -sellers try to negotiate higher prices -buyers try to negotiate lower prices
Economic profits
Your firm's revenue, minus the explicit financial costs and implicit opportunity costs. o Accounts for implicit opportunity costs Next best use of entrepreneur's time Next best use of entrepreneur's money o Relevant to deciding whether to start a business, going to school, putting money into the US bond market
Oligopoly
a few large sellers -product may be similar or somewhat different -if you raise your price some customers would leave while some would stay -downward sloping demand curve
more market power
a higher price mark up above marginal cost
natural monopoly
a market in which it is cheapest for a single firm to service the whole market -competition will never occur because of incumbent's cost-advantage
monopolistic competition
a market structure in which many companies sell products that are similar but not identical -differentiated products --> monopolistic: you are the only seller of this precise style of jeans -many sellers --> competition: many sellers of jeans Different product attributes yields market power due to quality, customer service, reputation, location ex: starbucks for coffee, nike for athletic shoes
product differentiation raises
bargaining power and hence prices and profitability -payless vs nike
price discrimination and marginal benefit
charge each consumer the highest price you can