6 - Entry And Exit Flashcards
Entry barriers
Allows incumbent to generate economic profit while making it newcomers unprofitable to entry the market.
Either raise sunk costs or reduce post-entry profitability.
1- Structural Entry Barriers (cannot influence)
2- Strategic Entry Barriers (can influence)
Entry conditions Bain’s typology
- Blockaded: structural barriers are so high that deterrence is not necessary
- Accommodated Entry: entry is so attractive that incumbents should waste resources trying to prevent it
- Deterred Entry: entry-deterring stratégies (predatory acts)
1- Structural Entry Barriers
1- Control is Essential Resources\Channel: protected if it can use the resource more effectively than newcomers or patents & copyrights
2- Economies of Scale and Scope: raisins the Minimum Efficient Scale of Entry
3- Marketing Advantages of Incumbency: umbrella effect but risk of major losses in case of customer disappointment
2- Strategic Entry Barriers
Predatory acts if:
- the incumbent earns higher profits as a monopolist than it does as a duopolies
- the strategy changes entrants’ expectations on post-entry competition (uncertainty due to asymmetric information => stay out)
1- Limit Pricing: fear that post-envy prices will not cover sunk costs of entry
2- Predatory Pricing
3- Strategic Bundling: giving consumers little choice but to buy the entire bundle (combination of goods&services)
4- excess capacity
War of attrition
If two or more parties expend resources battling with each other and if the war lasts long enough, even the winner may be worse off than when the war began because the resources it expended to win the war may exceed its ultimate reward.
Entry barrier checklist
- snuck Costs
- production barrier
- reputation
- switching costs
- tie up access
- limit pricing
- predatory pricing
- holding excess capacity
Exit Barriers
Firms stops production and either redeploy or sells off its assets
- snuck Costs (labor and raw material contracts)
- government regulations
- bankruptcy to avoid obligations
Contestable market
When a monopolist raises prices in a contestable market a hit and run entrant enters rapidly the market, undercut the price, reaps ST profits and exits quickly before the incumbent retaliates.
Works if it can set a price high enough to offset sunk costs of entry.
Multiple entry
Possible if:
- all have access to the production technology (no patent)
- the market demand is large enough
Other wise:
- take pre-emptive entry measures (lobbying gouvernement
- to obtain exclusive local rights (rent-seeking behaviour)
Entrant distinction
Diversifying or new
Judo economics
A change in market conditions acts in favour of the new entrant as he is still small and flexible to adapt to changes.
Entry and exit are pervasive
1/3 < 5y old
1/3 will exit in the next 5y