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Exam Sept 9th 2021 Text
Exam Sept 9th 2021 Text
Exam Sept 9th 2021 Text
A.Y. 2020/2021
BIE classroom exam – September 9th, 2021
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4. Which of the following statements on the relationship between market structure and innovation is TRUE?
a. Some scholars concur that innovation rates are higher in large concentrated industries than in
competitive markets as large oligopolistic firms have many resources to invest in innovation
b. Some scholars agree that competition incentivizes innovation, because firms in a competitive market
have abundant resources to innovate and protect their innovations. In addition, leveraging on their
position in the market (price-makers), they can set the price of the products, thus being able to repay
their innovation investments
c. The public benefits of innovation are always lower than the private benefits, independently of the
market structure
d. High competition among firms triggered by process innovation characterizes industries at the early
stage of their life
5. In the market, there are four large firms engaging in a collusive agreement. It follows that
a. If the firms play the trigger strategy and the discount factor of future profits is δ, each firm has
incentive to deviate from the collusive agreement if δ > 0.75
b. If the firms play the trigger strategy and the discount factor of future profits is δ, each firm has
incentive to deviate from the collusive agreement if δ < 0.25
c. A firm has less incentive to deviate from the collusive agreement if demand sharply increases
d. All the other statements are WRONG
6. Fairphone is a high-grow start-up producing innovative smartphones, which it sells at reasonable prices.
Fairphone is located in the Netherlands; it produces and assembles all the components of its smartphones in
house, except for their unbreakable screens. These screens are a crucial source of competitive advantage over
competitors, whose screens usually crash when the phones fall. Fairphone’s supplier of screens is Dolpha
Technology. Dolpha Technology is a medium-size firm (more than 100 employees). It is highly specialized
(the production of smart phone screens account for the 90% of its revenues) and located (headquarter and
production plants) in China. Basing on the description above, we conclude that Fairphone has incentive to
continue to buy the screens from Dolpha Technology. However, there might be risks of opportunistic
behaviours because
a. Geographical proximity between Fairphone and Dolpha Technology favours monitoring
b. If Fairphone cannot rely on other suppliers, Dolpha Technology might have incentive to renege the
terms of its supply contract with Fairphone
c. Specialization, which generates economies of scale, makes Dolpha Technology an efficient producer,
which has incentives to behave opportunistically independently from the downstream market structure
d. All the other statements are CORRECT
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7. Which of the following statements on managerial firms is TRUE?
a. Managers and owners have necessarily conflicting goals, managers are more informed than owners
on how to run the firm, and managers are risk neutral, while owners are risk adverse
b. Because of their risk attitude, managers tend to undertake diversification moves. Indeed,
diversification implies high uncertainty and risks; this especially occurs when managerial firms enter
unrelated industries where they lack industry-specific knowledge
c. In line with managerial theories, empirical evidence shows that managerial firms always perform
better (i.e., have higher profits) than owner-controlled firms. Indeed, owner-controlled firms suffer
from information asymmetries as owners have less firm-and industry-specific knowledge than
managers
d. All the other statements are FALSE.
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10. Firms 1-6 are active in industries A-F. The table reports firms’ shares of sales in each industry (a blank cell
means that a firm does not operate in an industry, e.g., firm 1 does not operate in industry D). Industries A, B
and C are related industries; the same holds for industries D, E, F. Which of the following statements is
FALSE?
Of note, more than one statement can be false
Firm Industry A Industry B Industry C Industry D Industry E Industry F
1 0.65 0.125 0.225
2 0.14 0.16 0.025 0.675
3 0.2 0.7 0.1
4 0.705 0.025 0.17 0.1
5 0.01 0.01 0.005 0.975
6 0.725 0.125 0.025 0.125
a. Basing on the Herfindahl index (HI), the industries D and F are more concentrated than industries A
and C
b. Firms 2 and 4 have a higher Gort index (D2) than firms 1 and 5
c. According to the Rumelt approach, firms 1 and 2 are related-business firms. Instead, firm 6 is a
dominant-business firm
d. Basing on the Herfindahl index, industry E is the most concentrated one as firm 5 dominates it. Basing
on the Specialization index (SI), firm 5 is the most diversified firm
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EXERCISE 1 [4 points]
A coal-fired power plant jointly produces electricity and air pollution. Air pollution adversely affects a nearby
farm producing agricultural products. Assume that pe = 20 is the price of electricity, pf = 10 is the price of the
agricultural products (both firms are price-takers), Ce (e, x) = e2 + (x2 – 8x) is the cost for the coal-power plant of
producing electricity (e) jointly with x units of pollution (pollution is a production externality), and Cf (f, x) = f2 +
fx is the cost for the farm of producing f units of agricultural products when the coal-fired plant emits x units of
pollution.
a.) Suppose there are no property rights on air pollution and thus there is no market for pollution (the price of
pollution is 0). Calculate the produced amount of electricity (e*), agricultural products (f*), pollution (x*)
and the profits (π*), separately for the two firms. [1 point]
b.) Suppose that the two firms merge to internalize the negative externality. Calculate the produced amount of
electricity (e*), agricultural products (f*), pollution (x*) and the overall profit of the merged firm (π*). [1
point]
c.) Suppose that property rights on the air are created and assigned to the farmer who can now sell pollution
rights at price px. Calculate the optimal amount of electricity (e*), the optimal number of agricultural products
(f*), the traded property rights (x*) and the profits (π*) for the two firms. [1.5 points]
d.) Suppose the property rights on air would have, instead, been assigned to the coal-fired power plant. Would
the results you found in point c.) of the exercise be different? [0.25 points] Explain your reasoning. [0.25
points]
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EXERCISE 2 [3.5 points]
Consider a duopoly situation with two firms (1 and 2) facing the demand curve P = 70 - 5Q, where Q = q1 + q2.
The firms’ cost functions are C1(q1) = 20 + 10q1 for firm 1, and C2(q2) = 10 + 12q2 for firm 2. Please, round off all
calculations to the second decimal and round up where necessary.
a.) Suppose that products are homogeneous and that the two firms (1 and 2) set their quantity level at the same
time. Find the resulting Nash’s equilibrium (quantities, prices, profits). [1.5 points]
b.) Suppose that products are homogeneous and that firm 1 sets its quantity before firm 2. Find the resulting
Nash’s equilibrium (quantities, prices, profits). [1.5 points]
c.) Suppose you are the CEO of firm 2 (the follower in case of b.), which competition regime would you choose?
[0.25 points] Explain why. [0.25 points]
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EXERCISE 3 [2.5 points]
Consider a second-hand market for motorbikes. There are high-quality motorbikes, which buyers value at most
15,000 $, and low-quality motorbikes, which buyers value at most 6,000$. High-quality sellers will accept 10,000
$, while low-quality sellers will accept 5,000 $. Assume that buyers cannot observe quality before purchasing.
a.) What is the maximum fraction of low-quality motorbikes up to which sellers will still have incentives to sell
high quality motorbikes? [1.5 point]
b.) Based on the fraction of low-quality motorbikes you computed in point a.) of the exercise, what is the buyers’
expected value? [1 point]