MICRO Competition Flashcards
1
Q
Cartel
- definition
- example
A
- A formal agreement between firms in which they agree on prices, output, market share etc.
- OPEC, 14 petrol exporting nations, aim to avoid oil price fluctuations
2
Q
Collusions
A
When existing firms engage in a price-fixing cartel (illegal).
3
Q
Contestable Markets
- Definiton
- Assumptions
A
- A market with low barriers to entry and exit e.g.low sunk costs, meaning firms are exposed to high levels of competition.
- Hit and run entry (chasing SNP), low barriers, low sunk costs.
4
Q
How to increase contestability in a market?
A
- Privatisation of public assets
- Harsher competition policies i.e. anit-monopoly and anit-cartel
- Deregulation, removing red tape
- Opening up to oversees trade e.g.EU single market
- Entrepreneurial zeal i.e.grants and tax breaks.
- Technological change = lower entry costs
5
Q
Contestable Markets
- Benefits
A
- Productively efficient (incentive to cut costs)
- X-efficient (incentive to cut costs)
- Allocative efficiency (incentive to produce goods are the prices consumers are whiling and able to pay)
- Dynamically efficient (incentive to improve quality, reliability and choice) BUT maybe not SNP
6
Q
Competition Market Authority (CMA) - Who - Aim - Role - Powers
A
- UK’s primary competition Authority - Aim to promote competition so as to protect consumer interest. - Prevent anti-competitive behaviour e.g.preditory pricing, verticle constraints and collusion/restrictive practices, investigating mergers. - Forces sale of assets, company fine (up to 10% sales revenue), individual fine, individual prosecution i.e.imprisonment, order practice to stop and disallow merger request.
7
Q
Barriers to Entry
- Definition
- Examples
A
Factors that prevent or make it difficult for new firms to enter a market
- Economies of scale
- Capital investment (specialist machinery)
- Patents
- Licences and permits
- Brand loyalty
- Marketing costs
- Specialist knowledge
8
Q
Barriers to Exit
- Definition
- Examples
A
Factors that prevent, or make it hard for, existing firms to exit a market.
- Poor factor mobility
- High sunk costs