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Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly: Fernando & Yvonn Quijano
Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly: Fernando & Yvonn Quijano
14
Monopolistic Competition
and Oligopoly
Prepared by:
© 2007 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Principles of Economics 8e by Case and Fair
CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
Monopolistic Competition
and Oligopoly
14
Chapter Outline
Monopolistic Competition
Product Differentiation, Advertising, and
Social Welfare
Price and Output Determination in
Monopolistic Competition
Economic Efficiency and Resource
Allocation
Oligopoly
Oligopoly Models
Game Theory
Repeated Games
A Game with Many Players: Collective
Action Can Be Blocked by a
Prisoners’ Dilemma
Oligopoly and Economic Performance
Industrial Concentration and
Technological Change
The Role of Government
Regulation of Mergers
A Proper Role?
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
AND OLIGOPOLY
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
TABLE 14.1 Percentage of Value of Shipments Accounted for by the Largest Firms in
Selected Industries, 1997
FOUR EIGHT TWENTY NUMBER
INDUSTRY LARGEST LARGEST LARGEST OF
DESIGNATION FIRMS FIRMS FIRMS FIRMS
Firms in a monopolistically competitive industry are small relative to the total market. New
firms can enter the industry in pursuit of profit, and relatively good substitutes for the firms’
products are available. Firms in monopolistically competitive industries try to achieve a
degree of market power by differentiating their products—by producing something new,
different, or better, or by creating a unique identity in the minds of consumers.
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION,
ADVERTISING,
AND SOCIAL WELFARE
product differentiation A strategy that
firms use to achieve market power.
Accomplished by producing products that
have distinct positive identities in
consumers’ minds.
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
The advocates of spirited competition believe that differentiated products and advertising
give the market system its vitality and are the basis of its power. They are the only ways to
begin to satisfy the enormous range of tastes and preferences in a modern economy.
Product differentiation also helps to ensure high quality and efficient production, and
advertising provides consumers with the valuable information on product availability,
quality, and price that they need to make efficient choices in the marketplace.
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
The bottom line, critics of product differentiation and advertising argue, is waste and
inefficiency. Enormous sums are spent to create minute, meaningless, and possibly
nonexistent differences among products. Advertising raises the cost of products and
frequently contains very little information. Often, it is merely an annoyance. Product
differentiation and advertising have turned the system upside down: People exist to
satisfy the needs of the economy, not vice versa. Advertising can lead to unproductive
warfare and may serve as a barrier to entry, thus reducing real competition.
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
No Right Answer
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
PRICE AND OUTPUT DETERMINATION
IN MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
Product Differentiation and Demand
Elasticity
The firm’s demand curve must end up tangent to its average total cost curve for profits to
equal zero. This is the condition for long-run equilibrium in a monopolistically competitive
industry.
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY AND RESOURCE
ALLOCATION
Because entry is easy and economic profits are
eliminated in the long run, we might conclude that
the result of monopolistic competition is efficient.
There are two problems, however.
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
OLIGOPOLY MODELS
The behavior of any given oligopolistic firm depends on the behavior of the other firms in the
industry comprising the oligopoly.
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
The colluding oligopoly will face market demand and produce only up to the point at which
marginal revenue and marginal cost are equal (MR = MC), and price will be set above
marginal cost.
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
As in the other oligopoly models, an oligopoly with a dominant price leader will produce a
level of output between the output that would prevail under perfect competition and the
output that a monopolist would choose in the same industry. It will also set a price between
the monopoly price and the perfectly competitive price. Some competition is usually more
efficient than none at all.
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
GAME THEORY
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
REPEATED GAMES
Contestable Markets
In contestable markets, even large oligopolistic firms end up behaving like perfectly
competitive firms. Prices are pushed to long-run average cost by competition, and positive
profits do not persist.
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
Review
The only necessary condition of oligopoly is that firms are large enough to have some
control over price. Oligopolies are concentrated industries. At one extreme is the cartel,
in which a few firms get together and jointly maximize profits—in essence, acting as a
monopolist. At the other extreme, the firms within the oligopoly vigorously compete
for small, contestable markets by moving capital quickly in response to observed profits.
In between are a number of alternative models, all of which stress the interdependence
of oligopolistic firms.
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENT
REGULATION OF MERGERS
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENT
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENT
A PROPER ROLE?
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CHAPTER 14: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
REVIEW TERMS AND CONCEPTS
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