L17 - Monopolistic Competition Flashcards

1
Q

What is the competition spectrum?

A

Goes from:

  • Perfect Competition
  • Monopolistic Competition
  • Oligopoly
  • Monopoly
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2
Q

What are the two types of Perfect Competition?

A

Perfect competition & pure monopoly are the extremes of the competition spectrum
In reality, most firms:

(a) face some competition (as opposed to monopoly)
(b) are not price takers (as opposed to perfect competition)

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3
Q

What are the two types of Imperfect Competition?

A

In the middle of this spectrum, we have imperfect competition
- Firms have some degree of market power (can raise price above marginal cost)
We are going to learn about forms of imperfect
competition:

(a) monopolistic competition
(b) oligopoly

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4
Q

What is Monopolistic Competition?

A
  • This model is a hybrid between monopoly and competition
  • There are many sellers that compete with each other to sell their goods & services
  • But each sellers can influence the price they charge for their goods and services
  • They have this ‘market power’ because –> their products are differentiated, so they are imperfect substitutes for each other
  • A firm can set a high price without losing all of its customers to low-priced rivals
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5
Q

What are the two different ways of Product Differentiation?

A

1) horizontal differentiation
quality is the same but the best depends on tastes
(2) vertical differentiation
quality differs…

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6
Q

What are the Assumption of Monopolistic Competition?

A
  • We retain A(1) and A(2) from lecture 1 –> buyers are price takers and buyers and sellers have complete information

A(3): SELLERS ARE PRICE MAKERS –> A price maker can influence the price which it sells its output
This has two parts:
(a) A seller sells more when its price is lower
(b) the seller’s output choice does not trigger a reaction its rivals

A(4): ENTRY IS FREE–> A potential seller can enter the market in the long run without incurring costs that
an incumbent seller would not incur
- Entry is a long-run decision: all factors of production must be able to change
- Notice that we made A(3) for monopoly and A(4) for perfect competition

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7
Q

What is the Market Structure of a Monopolist Market?

A
  • SIZE & NUMBER OF SELLERS –> Many, small
  • Sellers will not respond to each others output choices if there are lots in the market (This does not lead to price taking behaviour on its own
  • BARRIERS TO ENTRY –> Low
  • Firms must be able to enter the market
  • PRODUCT SUBSTITUTABILITY –> Differentiated
  • Buyers may prefer one differentiated product to another
    (1) horizontal – same quality, different tastes e.g. Mercedes v Audi
    (2) vertical – better quality, same tastes e.g. Mercedes v Ford
  • A seller can raise the price of its product and not lose all of its sales
  • Its demand curve slopes downward, even when there are many firms in the market
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8
Q

What is Short-Run Equilibrium under Monopolistic competition?

A
  • Since a seller is a price maker, its demand curve is downward sloping
    But its demand curve of is affected by the number of sellers there are in the market
  • Why? The more sellers, the fewer buyers there are to go around

-SIMPLIFY –> assume sellers are symmetric
For costs: this means their cost curves are the same shape
- For demand: it is less realistic but it simplifies things considerably

EXAMPLE: Suppose there are 4000 people who regularly frequent 40 pubs
- At the market price, each pub would have 100 people (= 4000 people/40 pubs)
- Now suppose the number of pubs increased by 10 and the price does not change
- Each pub would have 80 regulars (i.e. 4000 people/50 pubs)
Incumbents would lose 20 people to entrants, who each attract 80 people

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9
Q

What does the Short-Run Equilibrium under Monopolistic Competition look like on a graph?

A
  • Both the total market and individual sellers diagrams have Price (P/p) on the y-axis and Quantity Demanded (Q/q) on the x-axis
  • on the sellers diagram we have a negative gradient AR Line and MR line to the left of it
  • A positive MC curve and a flatter positive AVC curve to the diagonal right of the MC curve
  • Equilibrium occurs at the quantity and price on the AR line directly above MR=MC
  • On the market graph there is a negative gradient line for demand
  • Equilibrium is at price p* and quantity nq(P*,n)
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10
Q

What is the effect of more sellers moving into a monopolistic market?

A
  • When there are more sellers there are less buyers to go around
  • so the sellers demand curve shifts to the left
  • and the price then falls
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11
Q

What is Long-Run equilibrium like under Monopolistic Competition?

A
  • The long-run equilibrium analysis is similar to that of perfect competition:
  • we need to consider the fact that in the long-run

(a) all factors are variable which has an impact on the seller’s costs
(b) other sellers can freely enter the market

As a result, the equilibrium must ensure that:

  • incumbent sellers will not leave the market, and
  • potential sellers will not enter the market
  • This implies that sellers make normal profit in the long-run (zero economic profit)
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12
Q

What is the effect Long-Run Equilibrium under Monopolistic Competition by the cost curves?

A
  • In the long-run, the cost curves are flatter than in the short-run
  • Therefore the Sellers graph just looks the same with a flatter LRMC curve and LRAC curve
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13
Q

What is the effect Long-Run Equilibrium under Monopolistic Competition by entry of new firms?

A
  • Firms will enter the market until long-run profits are zero –> Shifts every demand curve to the left
  • The zero profit condition is at: p{LR} = AR{LR} ( at a tangent) = LRAC
  • this will also be at the point above MR{LR}=LRMC
  • The graph for the Sellers diagram now just shifts LRAC up
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14
Q

How does Monopolistic Competition compare with Perfect Competition on a graph?

A
  • With Price (P) on the y-axis and Quantity (Q) on the x-axis
  • With a line at P=D{L}=AR=MR under perfect competition
  • a positive LRMC curve and a tangential LRAC which meets the Demand curve at the point where MR=LRMC –> making 0 economic profits
  • Adding monopolistic competition with the negative line of D=AR which is at a tangent to the LRAC and an steep negative gradient of MR to the left of the demand line
  • At the intersection of MR under monopolistic competition and LRMC the point directly above will be the tangent where D=AR is equal to LRAC
  • From these two models of competition we see that more is produced under perfect composition than under monopolistic competition but the price is less
  • under perfect competition P=LRMC but under monopolistic competition P > LRMC
  • Price under monopolistic competition is greater than the minimum efficient scale –> there is excess capacity as the firms could produce more and reduce there LRAC
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15
Q

How is Price-Cost Margins different between Monopolistic competition and Perfect competition?

A
  • Monopolistic competition- -> price is above marginal cost, even in the long run
  • Perfect competition –> price equals marginal cost

How is this consistent with the free entry condition?
- The zero profit condition requires that price is equal to average total cost
- Sellers produce on the downward portion of their average total cost curve,
so marginal cost must be below average total costs

  • Thus, for price equal to average total costs, price must be above marginal cost
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16
Q

How is Excess different between Monopolistic competition and Perfect competition?

A
  • A seller’s output is smaller than the level that minimises average total costs
  • This point is called the efficient scale of the firm
  • At any level of output below the efficient scale, a firm can increase its output and lower its average cost of production

In the long run:

  • perfectly competitive sellers produce at the efficient scale,
  • monopolistically competitive sellers do not
  • Thus, firms have excess capacity: they can produce more and lower ATC
17
Q

How is Excess different between Monopolistic competition and Perfect competition?

A
  • A seller’s output is smaller than the level that minimises average total costs
  • This point is called the efficient scale of the firm
  • At any level of output below the efficient scale, a firm can increase its output and lower its average cost of production

In the long run:

  • perfectly competitive sellers produce at the efficient scale,
  • monopolistically competitive sellers do not
  • Thus, firms have excess capacity: they can produce more and lower ATC
18
Q

What Criteria are we looking at to see if Monopolistic Competition is inefficient?

A

1- is there some dead weight loss
2- Is the number of firms is the market ideal
3- Is excess Capacity bad for welfare

19
Q

Is there some Deadweight loss under Monopolistic competition which makes it inefficient?

A

Yes. Some buyers will be deterred from purchasing

20
Q

Is the number of firms in the market ‘ideal’ under Monopolistic competition which makes it inefficient?

A
  • Not sure. Consider the effect on total welfare of the last seller entering the market.

(a) product-variety effect: consumer surplus increases
another seller provides more choice: the more, the better!
(b) business-stealing effect: producer surplus decreases another seller reduces profits of all other sellers

If (a) is greater than (b): too few! If (a) is less than (b): too many!
If (a) equals (b): ideal number!

21
Q

Is Excess Capacity bad for welfare under Monopolistic competition which makes it inefficient?

A

Not sure. Excess capacity implies that variety is costly. This is only a bad for welfare if product variety is not valued.

22
Q

What is the Summary of this lecture on Monopolistic Competition?

A
  • When sellers are –> price makers and entry is free
  • A market will have –> many sellers, who sell differentiated products, and low barriers to entry
  • In the short-run –> the price does not reflects how much it cost to produce
    P > (SR)MC
  • sellers can make supernormal profit

In the long-run –> the price is above the average cost at its minimum point:
P > (LR)MC
- sellers can only make normal profit