1.5 Perfect competition, imperfectly competitive markets, and monopoly Flashcards
Market
anywhere where buyers and sellers come together, a price is agreed and a transaction takes place
Market structure
the characteristics of a market which determine the behaviour of firms within the market
Price taker
a firm which passively accepts the ruling market price set by market conditions outside its control
Price maker
a firm possessing the power to set the price within the market
Characteristics of perfect competition (6)
• a large number of buyers and sellers
• all buyers and sellers possesses perfect market information
• buyers/sellers can buy/sell as much as they wish at the market price
• any single buyer or seller is unable to influence the market price
• the goods being sold are homogeneous
• no barriers to entry or exit
Homogeneous goods
goods which are identical
Barriers to entry
make it difficult or impossible for new firms to enter a market
Consumer surplus
a measure of the economic welfare enjoyed by consumers: surplus utility received over and above the price paid for a good
Producer surplus
a measure of the economic welfare enjoyed by firms or producers: the difference between the price a firm succeeds in charging and the minimum price it would be prepared to accept
Deadweight loss
the loss of welfare when the maximum attainable level of total welfare is not achieved
Allocative efficiency
A state of the economy in which production is in accordance with consumer preferences; in particular, every good or service is produced up to the point where the last unit provides a marginal benefit to society equal to the marginal cost of producing it
Describe perfect competition in the short run
- firms can be making abnormal profit
- new firms cannot enter the market due to there being at least one fixed factor of production
Describe perfect competition in the long run
- new firms enter the market
- the equilibrium price in the market falls, just until firms are making normal profit
Monopoly power
power to set prices and other aspects of the market such as differentiation. Firms in market structures other than perfect competition possess a degree of monopoly power
Monopoly
a market structure with only firm in the market
Natural monopoly
when there is only room in a market for one firm benefiting from economies of scale to the full
Differentiated goods
goods which are different from other goods
Market failure
when the market mechanism leads to a misallocation of resources in an economy, either completely failing to provide a good or service or providing the wrong quantity
Oligopoly
a market structure where there are a small number of interdependent firms
Collusion
agreements between firms to restrict competition
How does monopoly power lead to market failure? (4)
- redistributes welfare away from consumers to producers
- consumers are exploited as they pay a price above the marginal cost of production
- reduces total welfare
- producers’ net gain is smaller than the loss inflicted on consumers
Barriers to entry in a monopoly (9)
- patents + trademarks
- limit pricing
- advertising + marketing
- control over outlets
- control over suppliers
- reaction of existing firms
- legislation
- cost-advantage
- differentiation
Legislation
government may restrict the ability of firms to compete in the market. e.g. for 350 years Royal Mail was the only firm allowed to deliver letters in the UK
Differentiation
making a good different from the competition through marketing and branding can prevent a new firm from being able to enter a market and gain market share