{ Market Structures SSEMI4c- Identify the basic characteristics of the four market structures
{Market Structures
SSEMI4c- Identify the basic characteristics of the four market structures
The rivalry among sellers to achieve goals and make the highest profit
Competition
Lower pricesBetter productsMore innovation
Why is competition beneficial for consumers?
Nature and degree of competition among firms doing business in the same industry
Market structure
Perfect Competition Oligopoly
A market structure in which a large number of firms all produce the same product.
Large number of buyers and sellers (thousands)
Identical products – no need for advertising – tomatoes
are tomatoes No control over price. Firms are
price takers. Few barriers to entry, businesses
are free to enter into, conduct, or get out of business
Perfect CompetitionIdentical
A market structure in which many companies sell products that are similar but not identical.
Many Firms, but less than perfect competition (100’s)
Products are similar but not identical (fastfood).
Characterized by product differentiation (real or perceived)
Some control over price because products are not exactly the same.
No major barriers to entry. Firms can enter and leave easily.
Monopolistic Competition
Which do you prefer?
The use of advertising, giveaways, or promotional campaigns to convince buyers that the product is somehow better than another brand
Non-Price Competition
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDaLbA3bwPY&list=PLxgUkHTvXNoYSV9JR0UdjV-YEYaHVYssQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFUUybc_M40
A market structure in which only a few sellers offer similar or identical products.
Few very large sellers dominate the industry (10’s of firms)
ex. AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, etc.
Products can be similar or identical
Some control over price When one changes price, the others
have to decide whether to follow
Significant barrier to entry High start-up cost Costly R & D Control over key resources by a
competitor
Oligopoly
Cartels - agreement between competing firms to control prices or exclude entry of a new competitor in a market
Collusion – formal agreement to set specific prices or to otherwise behave in cooperative manner (Ex: OPEC)
Price Leadership – one firm dominates the market and the others follow their lead (increasing or lowering price)
Oligopoly – Pricing Models
A market with only one seller for a particular product
Usually one good or service
Unless regulated by the government, firm has full control over price
Complete barriers to entry (no new competition)
Monopoly
Natural Monopoly – market situation where the costs of production are minimized by having a single firm produce the product ex. Public utility companies –
waste to run multiple electric lines, oil pipeline in Alaska
Utilizes economies of scale – average cost of production falls as the firm gets larger
Types of Monopolies
Geographic Monopoly – based on absence of other sellers in a certain geographic area (gas station, drugstore in small town)
Types of Monopoly
Technological Monopoly – based on ownership or control of a manufacturing method, process, or other scientific advance (certain pharmaceutical drugs)
Patent – exclusive right to manufacture, use, sell invention – usually good for 20 years
Copyright – authors, art – good for their lifetime plus 50 years
Types of Monopoly
Government Monopoly - monopoly owned and operated by the government (military, water and sewage)
Types of Monopolies