Part 4 Flashcards
How to identify competition?
1) Cross PED; positive – substitutes, negative – complements
2) Diversion Analysis; calculating market share of consumer’s second choice
3) Standard Industrial Classification Codes
4) Geographical Identification; flow analysis
The Austrian School; Schumpeter
- Competition driven by innovation
- Innovative firms become monopolists, then others catch up
Structure Conduct Performance Model (SCP), Harvard School
- Market structure (concentration) affects conduct (strategy) which affects performance (market power)
- Market structure driven by basic supply, demand, cost functions
How to measure concentration?
1) N-firm concentration ratio; combined market share of N largest firms
2) Herfindahl Index; sum of squared market shares
Cartels can work, if..
- Enforcement mechanisms
- Producers have little variation in MC
- L.r. profits associated w/ not cheating outweigh s.r. gains of cheating
Structural Barriers to Entry:
- Control of Essential Resources
- Economies of Scale & Scope
- Marketing Advantages
Strategic Barriers to Entry:
- Limit Pricing; incumbent sets price to discourage entrants
- Predatory Pricing; setting pries below s.r. MC expecting to recoup losses via monopoly profits after
- Expanding Capacity; incumbent threatens to lower price if entry occurs
- Strategic Bundling; combining goods/services to sell them for less than separate prices
Barriers to Exit
- Sunk costs
- Relation-specific assets
- Government regulations
How to measure conduct?
1) Pricing of products
2) Investments
3) M&A’s
How to measure performance?
1) Price-cost margin; Lerner’s Index (P-MC/P)
2) Profitability
3) Production Efficiency
4) Innovative Performance
Chicago School:
- firm’s choice influence market structure; ‘reverse causation’
- more efficient firms are more profitable and grow large
- firms influence the entry decisions of other firms
The Collusion Hypothesis vs the Efficiency Hypothesis
Collusion H – positive relation between concentration & profitability is evidence of collusion (Harvard)
Efficiency H – positive relation between conc. and profitability reflects the natural tendency for efficient firms to be successful (Chicago)
Horizontal Differentiation
- Only some consumers prefer the product to others
Cournot Competition
The strategic choices of each firm are the amounts they will produce
Bertand Competition
firms compete in terms of price of products, not quantity