Contestability Flashcards
1
Q
what is a contestable market
A
A perfectly contestable market is one where there are no barriers to entry or exit due to an absence of sunk costs
2
Q
what is a sunk cost
A
a cost that cannot be recovered upon exiting an industry
3
Q
what are the characteristics of a contestable market
A
- no barriers to entry or exit
- no sunk costs
- new firms have no competitive disadvantage over incumbent firms
- new firms have access to the same technology as incumbent firms
4
Q
in contestable markets, why is there the fear of hit and run, and what is hit and run competition
A
- concerned with the threat of competition
- if firms are making supernormal profits, then new firms may be able to enter the market, take some supernormal profits, and exit again
- the implication of this is that incumbent firms should only make very little profits, or produce where AC = AR, and make normal profits, in order to deter other firms from entering the market.
5
Q
what are the factors that make a market more contestable?
A
- no sunk costs
- growth of the internet
- improved information
- deregulation - lack of patents protecting information, and preventing firms from entering markets. Deregulation can make a market more contestable by lowering the barriers to entry and exit
- tougher competition policy - laws acting against predatory behaviour by existing firms makes markets more contestable, by improving the opportunities for competition
6
Q
what are the factors making a market less contestable
A
- high sunk costs - costs paid to enter an industry which cannot be paid upon exit from an industry
- large economies of scale
- information asymmetries
- intellectual property rights (patents) - limits competition between firms, and increases the barriers to entry and exit
- existence of well known brand names
7
Q
if a market is highly contestable, how does impact the efficiency of the firm
A
- allocative efficiency - increases
- productive efficiency - increases
- x-inefficiency - decreases
- dynamic efficiency - decreases due to fall in profit
- health and safety - falls (maybe, cutting costs)
8
Q
Evaluation of contestability
A
- difficult to measure contestability - the degree of contestability is measured by the extent to which the gains from entering a market outweigh the costs of leaving the market
- might not be desirable - some markets require dynamic efficiency gains
- threat of hit and run competition is often not enough to keep prices low - markets are never fully contestable, so firms could make supernormal profits and only cut prices below AVC if firms enter the market
- markets change over time