3.4.7 - Contestability Flashcards
Define sunk costs
Costs which cannot be recovered if a business decides to leave an industry - the existence of sunk costs makes a market less contestable
Characteristics of a contestable market
- no/low barriers to exit or entry
- large pool of potential entrants
- perfect information
- no sunk costs
- new firms have no competitive disadvantage compared with new firms; aka incumbent firms are subject to hit and run competition
Result of contestable markets
- incumbents cannot set a price that is higher than average cost, becuase as soon as it does, the possibility of hit and run entry by new firms increases, competing away SNP
- so they use a limit price; P=AC or close to P=AC
- comeptitive pricing strategy
examples of hit and run firms
- concert tickets -ticketmaster
- stadium - selling merchandise for football teams at a match, afterwards they do not continue selling it
How do monopolists avoid hit and run entry firms from competing away SNP
- if they try to profit maximise in a contestable market, they are vulnerable to hit and entry so they need to set price equal to AC - make normal profits so incentive of SNP to enter a market
- this is a limit pricing strategy
- but they are neither productively or allocatively efficient
How has internet impacted contestability
- internet has given consumers improved knowledge of market conditions and enable them to make far more informed choices
- Thomas cook failed bc they couldn’t compete with online travel firms and also internet meant individuals made their own holiday plans
- so internet made travel sector more contestable and thus more competitive
How else do firms deter new entrants
- raise fixed costs of being in the industry
- heavy advertising; new firms cannot afford such wide reaching advert campaigns so they are deterred
- advertising is a fixed and sunk cost
- research and development; requires lots of investment
What can the contestable market theory be applied to
monopoly, oligopoly and monopolistic competition
How has technology impacted contestability
1) lowered barriers to exit and entry; no longer have to be physical so reduced start up and sunk costs, no labour costs, easier advertising (big b to entry)
2) increased the pool of potential entrants; cheaper production methods to disrupt incumbents
3) improved information for economic agents; firms find out about tech and costs easier and comms improved
What do monopolies do in a contestable market
move from profit maximising to competitive pricing strategy; AC=AR on diagram, making normal profit to eliminate threat of new entry and to prepare if new threat comes in (low price and high quantity)
- in reality we see fir
Pros of contestable markets
- limit pricing strategy (move to it) so now we achieve/ move to it
- allocative, efficiency, productive efficiency, x-efficiency, job creation
Cons of contestable market
- lack of dynamic efficiency bc low/no profit margins, BUT if new firms come in with new innovation, that in itself is dynamic efficiency
- costs cutting in dangerous areas
- creative destruction; job losses if firms outcomepted by new ideas BUT EVAL by saying these fired people just move to new firms
- anti competitve stratgies; short run contestable market provides benefits but in if firms use limit price, high advertising, predatory pricing, mergers will mean it is not contestable in the long run so static inefficiency created
evaluate pros and cons of contestable markets
- length of contestability; if new firms can patent their ideas or anti competitve strategies, not contestable for that long
- role of tech; reduce contestability as it can be patented. tech can improve info firms have of consumers so they price discriminate
- regulation: minimise issues of cost cutting and anticompetitve strategies so these cons are actually reduced
- dynamic efficiecny: no snp so no DE but actually new firms bring new idea so dyanmic efficiency over time
Define contestable market
Where an entrant has access to all production techniques available to the
incumbents is not prohibited from wooing the incumbent’s customers, and
entry decisions can be reversed without cost. The key assumption for
contestability is that businesses are free to enter and leave the market.
Define hit and run competition
When a business enters an industry to take advantage of temporarily high
(supernormal) market profits. Common in highly contestable markets.