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Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B
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Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

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Page 1: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly

CHAPTER13B

Page 2: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

After studying this chapter you will be able to

Define and identify oligopoly

Explain two traditional oligopoly models

Use game theory to explain how price and output are determined in oligopoly

Use game theory to explain other strategic decisions

Page 3: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

PC War Games

In some markets there are only two firms. Computer chips are an example.

The chips that drive most PCs are made by Intel and Advanced Micro Devices.

How does competition between just two chip makers work?

Do they operate in the social interest, like the firms in perfect competition?

Or do they restrict output to increase profit, like a monopoly?

Page 4: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

What Is Oligopoly?

The distinguishing features of oligopoly are

Natural or legal barriers that prevent entry of new firms

A small number of firms compete

Page 5: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

What is Oligopoly?

Barriers to Entry

Either natural or legal barriers to entry can create oligopoly.

Figure 13.9 shows two oligopoly situations.

In part (a), there is a natural duopoly—a market with two firms.

Page 6: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

What is Oligopoly?

In part (b), there is a natural oligopoly market with three firms.

A legal oligopoly might arise even where the demand and costs leave room for a larger number of firms.

Page 7: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

What is Oligopoly?

Small Number of Firms

Because an oligopoly market has a small number of firms, the firms are interdependent and face a temptation to cooperate.

Interdependence: With a small number of firms, each firm’s profit depends on every firm’s actions.

Cartel: A cartel and is an illegal group of firms acting together to limit output, raise price, and increase profit.

Firms in oligopoly face the temptation to form a cartel, but aside from being illegal, cartels often break down.

Page 8: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

What is Oligopoly?

Examples of OligopolyFigure 13.10 shows some examples of oligopoly.

Four largest firms

Next four largest firms

Next 12 largest firms

An HHI that exceeds 1,000 is usually an oligopoly.

An HHI below 1,000 is usually monopolistic competition.

Page 9: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

The Kinked Demand Curve Model

In the kinked demand curve model of oligopoly, each firm believes that if it raises its price, its competitors will not follow, but if it lowers its price all of its competitors will follow.

Page 10: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Figure 13.11 shows the kinked demand curve model.

The firm believes that the demand for its product has a kink at the current price and quantity.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

Page 11: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

Above the kink, demand is relatively elastic because all other firm’s prices remain unchanged.

Below the kink, demand is relatively inelastic because all other firm’s prices change in line with the price of the firm shown in the figure.

Page 12: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

The kink in the demand curve means that the MR curve is discontinuous at the current quantity—shown by that gap AB in the figure.

Page 13: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

Fluctuations in MC that remain within the discontinuous portion of the MR curve leave the profit-maximizing quantity and price unchanged.

For example, if costs increased so that the MC curve shifted upward from MC0 to MC1, the profit-maximizing price and quantity would not change.

Page 14: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

The beliefs that generate the kinked demand curve are not always correct and firms can figure out this fact.

If MC increases enough, all firms raise their prices and the kink vanishes.

A firm that bases its actions on wrong beliefs doesn’t maximize profit.

Page 15: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

Dominant Firm Oligopoly

In a dominant firm oligopoly, there is one large firm that has a significant cost advantage over many other, smaller competing firms.

The large firm operates as a monopoly, setting its price and output to maximize its profit.

The small firms act as perfect competitors, taking as given the market price set by the dominant firm.

Page 16: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Figure 13.12 shows10 small firms in part (a). The demand curve, D, is the market demand and the supply curve S10 is the supply of the 10 small firms.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

Page 17: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

At a price of $1.50, the 10 small firms produce the quantity demanded. At this price, the large firm would sell nothing.

Page 18: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

But if the price was $1.00, the 10 small firms would supply only half the market, leaving the rest to the large firm.

Page 19: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

The demand curve for the large firm’s output is the curve XD on the right.

Page 20: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

The large firm can set the price and receives a marginal revenue that is less than price along the curve MR.

Page 21: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

The large firm maximizes profit by setting MR = MC. Let’s suppose that the marginal cost curve is MC in the figure.

Page 22: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

The profit-maximizing quantity for the large firm is 10 units. The price charged is $1.00.

Page 23: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

The small firms take this price and supply the rest of the quantity demanded.

Page 24: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Two Traditional Oligopoly Models

In the long run, such an industry might become a monopoly as the large firm buys up the small firms and cuts costs.

Page 25: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Game theory is a tool for studying strategic behavior, which is behavior that takes into account the expected behavior of others and the mutual recognition of interdependence.

The Prisoners’ Dilemma

The prisoners’ dilemma game illustrates the four features of a game. Rules Strategies Payoffs Outcome

Page 26: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Rules

The rules describe the setting of the game, the actions the players may take, and the consequences of those actions.

In the prisoners’ dilemma game, two prisoners (Art and Bob) have been caught committing a petty crime.

Each is held in a separate cell and cannot communicate with each other.

Page 27: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Each is told that both are suspected of committing a more serious crime.

If one of them confesses, he will get a 1-year sentence for cooperating while his accomplice get a 10-year sentence for both crimes.

If both confess to the more serious crime, each receives 3 years in jail for both crimes.

If neither confesses, each receives a 2-year sentence for the minor crime only.

Page 28: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Strategies

Strategies are all the possible actions of each player.

Art and Bob each have two possible actions:

1. Confess to the larger crime.2. Deny having committed the larger crime.

With two players and two actions for each player, there are four possible outcomes:

1. Both confess.2. Both deny. 3. Art confesses and Bob denies.4. Bob confesses and Art denies.

Page 29: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Payoffs

Each prisoner can work out what happens to him—can work out his payoff—in each of the four possible outcomes.

We can tabulate these outcomes in a payoff matrix.

A payoff matrix is a table that shows the payoffs for every possible action by each player for every possible action by the other player.

The next slide shows the payoff matrix for this prisoners’ dilemma game.

Page 30: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Page 31: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Outcome

If a player makes a rational choice in pursuit of his own best interest, he chooses the action that is best for him, given any action taken by the other player.

If both players are rational and choose their actions in this way, the outcome is an equilibrium called Nash equilibrium—first proposed by John Nash.

The following slides show how to find the Nash equilibrium.

Page 32: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Bob’s view of the world

Page 33: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Bob’s view of the world

Page 34: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Art’s view of the world

Page 35: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Art’s view of the world

Page 36: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Equilibrium

Page 37: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

An Oligopoly Price-Fixing Game

A game like the prisoners’ dilemma is played in duopoly.

A duopoly is a market in which there are only two producers that compete.

Duopoly captures the essence of oligopoly.

Figure 13.13 on the next slide describes the demand and cost situation in a natural duopoly.

Page 38: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Part (a) shows each firm’s cost curves.

Part (b) shows the market demand curve.

Page 39: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

This industry is a natural duopoly.

Two firms can meet the market demand at the least cost.

Page 40: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

How does this market work?

What is the price and quantity produced in equilibrium?

Page 41: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Collusion

Suppose that the two firms enter into a collusive agreement.

A collusive agreement is an agreement between two (or more) firms to restrict output, raise the price, and increase profits.

Such agreements are illegal in the United States and are undertaken in secret.

Firms in a collusive agreement operate a cartel.

Page 42: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

The strategies that firms in a cartel can pursue are to Comply Cheat

Because each firm has two strategies, there are four possible combinations of actions for the firms:

1. Both comply.2. Both cheat.3. Trick complies and Gear cheats.4. Gear complies and Trick cheats.

Page 43: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Colluding to Maximize Profits

Firms in a cartel act like a monopoly and maximum economic profit.

Page 44: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

To find that profit, we set marginal cost for the cartel equal to marginal revenue for the cartel.

Page 45: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

The cartel’s marginal cost curve is the horizontal sum of the MC curves of the two firms and the marginal revenue curve is like that of a monopoly.

Page 46: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

The firm’s maximize economic profit by producing the quantity at which MCI = MR.

Page 47: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Each firm agrees to produce 2,000 units and each firm shares the maximum economic profit. The blue rectangle shows each firm’s economic profit.

Page 48: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

When each firm produces 2,000 units, the price is greater than the firm’s marginal cost, so if one firm increased output, its profit would increase.

Page 49: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

One Firm Cheats on a Collusive Agreement

Suppose the cheat increases its output to 3,000 units. Industry output increases to 5,000 and the price falls.

Page 50: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

For the complier, ATC now exceeds price.

For the cheat, price exceeds ATC.

Page 51: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

The complier incurs an economic loss.

The cheat makes an increased economic profit.

Page 52: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Both Firms Cheat

Suppose that both increase their output to 3,000 units.

Page 53: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Industry output is 6,000 units, the price falls, and both firms make zero economic profit—the same as in perfect competition.

Page 54: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Possible Outcomes

If both comply, each firm makes $2 million a week. If both cheat, each firm makes zero economic profit. If Trick complies and Gear cheats, Trick incurs an economic loss of $1 million and Gear makes an economic profit of $4.5 million. If Gear complies and Trick cheats, Gear incurs an economic loss of $1 million and Trick makes an economic profit of $4.5 million.

The next slide shows the payoff matrix for the duopoly game.

Page 55: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Payoff Matrix

Page 56: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Trick’s view of the world

Page 57: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Trick’s view of the world

Page 58: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Gear’s view of the world

Page 59: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Gear’s view of the world

Page 60: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Equilibrium

Page 61: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Nash Equilibrium

The Nash equilibrium is that both firms cheat.

The quantity and price are those of a competitive market, and the firms make zero economic profit.

Other Oligopoly Games

Advertising and R&D games are also prisoners’ dilemmas.

An R&D Game

Procter & Gamble and Kimberley Clark play an R&D game in the market for disposable diapers.

Page 62: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

Here is the payoff matrix for the Pampers Versus Huggies game.

Page 63: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

The Disappearing Invisible Hand

In all the versions of the prisoners’ dilemma that we’ve examined, the players end up worse off than they would if they were able to cooperate.

The pursuit of self-interest does not promote the social interest in these games.

Page 64: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Oligopoly Games

A Game of Chicken

In the prisoners’ dilemma game, the Nash equilibrium is a dominant strategy equilibrium, by which we mean the best strategy for each player is independent of what the other player does.

Not all games have such an equilibrium.

One that doesn’t is the game of “chicken.”

Page 65: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Payoff Matrix

Page 66: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

KC’s view of the world

Page 67: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

KC’s view of the world

Page 68: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

P&G’s view of the world

Page 69: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

P&G’s view of the world

Page 70: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Equilibrium

Page 71: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Repeated Games and Sequential Games

A Repeated Duopoly Game

If a game is played repeatedly, it is possible for duopolists to successfully collude and make a monopoly profit.

If the players take turns and move sequentially (rather than simultaneously as in the prisoner’s dilemma), many outcomes are possible.

In a repeated prisoners’ dilemma duopoly game, additional punishment strategies enable the firms to comply and achieve a cooperative equilibrium, in which the firms make and share the monopoly profit.

Page 72: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Repeated Games and Sequential Games

One possible punishment strategy is a tit-for-tat strategy.

A tit-for-tat strategy is one in which one player cooperates this period if the other player cooperated in the previous period but cheats in the current period if the other player cheated in the previous period.

A more severe punishment strategy is a trigger strategy.

A trigger strategy is one in which a player cooperates if the other player cooperates but plays the Nash equilibrium strategy forever thereafter if the other player cheats.

Page 73: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Repeated Games and Sequential Games

Table 13.5 shows that a tit-for-tat strategy is sufficient to produce a cooperative equilibrium in a repeated duopoly game.

Price wars might result from a tit-for-tat strategy where there is an additional complication—uncertainty about changes in demand.

A fall in demand might lower the price and bring forth a round of tit-for-tat punishment.

Page 74: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Repeated Games and Sequential Games

A Sequential Entry Game in a Contestable Market

In a contestable market—a market in which firms can enter and leave so easily that firms in the market face competition from potential entrants—firms play a sequential entry game.

Page 75: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Repeated Games and Sequential Games

Figure 13.17 shows the game tree for a sequential entry game in a contestable market.

Page 76: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Repeated Games and Sequential Games

In the first stage, Agile decides whether to set the monopoly price or the competitive price.

Page 77: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Repeated Games and Sequential Games

In the second stage, Wanabe decides whether to enter or stay out.

Page 78: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

Repeated Games and Sequential Games

In the equilibrium of this entry game,

Agile sets a competitive price and makes zero economic profit to keep Wanabe out.

A less costly strategy is limit pricing, which sets the price at the highest level that is consistent with keeping the potential entrant out.

Page 79: Oligopoly CHAPTER 13B. After studying this chapter you will be able to Define and identify oligopoly Explain two traditional oligopoly models Use game.

THE END