Top Banner
Price competition.
21

Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Mar 28, 2015

Download

Documents

Lily Erickson
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Price competition.

Page 2: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization

• Monopoly

• Bertrand Price Competition

Page 3: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Monopoly

• A monopoly solves Max p(q)q-c(q) – q is quantity. – c(q) is cost of producing quantity q.– p(q) is price (price depends upon output).

• FOC yields p(q)+p’(q)q=c’(q). This is also Marginal Revenue=Marginal Cost.

Page 4: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Example (from Experiment)

• We had quantity q=15-p. While we were choosing prices. This is equivalent (in the monopoly case) to choosing quantity.

• r(q)= q*p(q) where p(q)=15-q. Marginal revenue was 15-2q.

• We had constant marginal cost of 3. Thus, c(q)=3*q.

• Profit=q*(15-q)-3*q• What is the choice of q? What does this imply

about p?

Page 5: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Bertrand (1883) price competition.

• Both firms choose prices simultaneously and have constant marginal cost c.

• Firm one chooses p1. Firm two chooses p2.• Consumers buy from the lowest price firm. (If

p1=p2, each firm gets half the consumers.)• An equilibrium is a choice of prices p1 and p2

such that – firm 1 wouldn’t want to change his price given p2. – firm 2 wouldn’t want to change her price given p1.

Page 6: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Bertrand Equilibrium• Take firm 1’s decision if p2 is strictly bigger than c:

– If he sets p1>p2, then he earns 0.– If he sets p1=p2, then he earns 1/2*D(p2)*(p2-c).– If he sets p1 such that c<p1<p2 he earns D(p1)*(p1-c).

• For a large enough p1 that is still less than p2, we have:– D(p1)*(p1-c)>1/2*D(p2)*(p2-c).

• Each has incentive to slightly undercut the other.• Equilibrium is that both firms charge p1=p2=c.• Not so famous Kaplan & Wettstein (2000) paper shows that there

may be other equilibria with positive profits if there aren’t restrictions on D(p).

Page 7: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Bertrand Game

Firm B

Firm A

£9

1835.75

018

0 17.88

£8.50

£9

£8.50

Marginal cost= £3, Demand is 15-p.

The Bertrand competition can be written as a game.

For any price> £3, there is this incentive to undercut. Similar to the prisoners’ dilemma.

35.75 17.88

Page 8: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Sample result: Bertrand Game

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29

Time

Pri

ceAverage Price Average Selling Price

Marginal Cost

Two Firms

Fixed Partners

Two Firms

Random Partners

Five Firms

Random Partners

Page 9: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Cooperation in Bertrand Comp.

• A Case: The New York Post v. the New York Daily News

• January 1994 40¢ 40¢

• February 1994 50¢ 40¢

• March 1994 25¢ (in Staten Island) 40¢

• July 1994 50¢ 50¢

Page 10: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

What happened?

• Until Feb 1994 both papers were sold at 40¢. • Then the Post raised its price to 50¢ but the

News held to 40¢ (since it was used to being the first mover).

• So in March the Post dropped its Staten Island price to 25¢ but kept its price elsewhere at 50¢,

• until News raised its price to 50¢ in July, having lost market share in Staten Island to the Post. No longer leader.

• So both were now priced at 50¢ everywhere in NYC.

Page 11: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Collusion

• If firms get together to set prices or limit quantities, what would they choose? As in your experiment.

• D(p)=15-p and c(q)=3q.• Price Maxp (p-3)*(15-p)• What is the choice of p?• This is the monopoly price and quantity! • Maxq1,q2 (15-q1-q2)*(q1+q2)-3(q1+q2).

Page 12: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Graph of total profit:(15-price)(price-3)

4 6 8 10 12 14

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

Profit

Price

Maximum is price=9With profit 36.

Page 13: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Collusion by Repeated Interaction

• Let us say that firms have a discount factor of B. • If each make 18 each period. How much is the

present value?• The one period undercutting gains is close to 18.• The other firm can punish under-cutters by

causing zero profit from then on.• A firm will not cheat only if the punishment is

worse than the gains. • For what values of B will the firm not cheat? • 18B/(1-B)>=18 (or B>=1/2).

Page 14: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Anti-competitive practices.• In the 80’s, Crazy Eddie said that he will beat any

price since he is insane. • Today, many companies have price-beating and

price-matching policies.• A price-matching policy is simply if you (a customer)

can find a price lower than ours, we will match it. • A price-beating policy is that we will beat any price

that you can find. (It is NOT explicitly setting a price lower or equal to your competitors.)

Page 15: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Price-matching Policy

Page 16: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Price-Beating Policy

Page 17: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Price Matching/Price Beating

• They seem very much in favor of competition: consumers are able to get the lower price.

• In fact, they are not. By having such a policy a stores avoid loosing customers and thus are able to charge a high initial

price (yet another paper by this Kaplan guy).

Page 18: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Price-matching• Marginal cost is 3 and demand is 15-p. • There are two firms A and B. Customers buy from the lowest price

firm. Assume if both firms charge the same price customers go to the closest firm.

• What are profits if both charge 9?• Without price matching policies, what happens if firm A charges a

price of 8?• Now if B has a price matching policy, then what will B’s net price be to

customers?• B has a price-matching policy. If B charges a price of 9, what is firm

A’s best choice of a price. • If both firms have price-matching policies and price of 9, does either

have an incentive to undercut the other?

Page 19: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Price-Matching Policy Game

Firm B

Firm A

£9

1817.88

17.8818

17.88 17.88

£8.50

£9

£8.50

Marginal cost= £3, Demand is 15-p. If both firms have price-matching policies, they split the demand at the lower price.

The monopoly price is now an equilibrium!

17.88 17.88

Page 20: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Rule of thumb prices

• Many shops use a rule of thumb to determine prices. • Clothing stores may set price double their costs.• Restaurants set menu prices roughly 4 times costs.• Can this ever be optimal?• q=Apє (p=(1/A) 1/єq1/є) where -1> є• Notice in this case that p(q)+p’(q)q=((1+є)/ є)p(q).• If marginal cost is constant, then p= є/(1+є)mc for

any mc.• There is a constant mark-up percentage!• Notice that (dq/q)/(dp/p)= є. What does є represent?

Page 21: Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.

Homework

• El Al and British Air are competing for passengers on the Tel Aviv- Heathrow route. Assume marginal cost is 4 and demand is Q = 18 − P. – If they choose prices simultaneously, what will be the

Bertrand equilibrium? – If they can collude together and fix prices, what would

they charge. – In practice with such competition under what conditions

would you expect collusion to be strong and under what conditions would you expect it to be weak.

– Under what conditions should the introduction of BMI (another airline) affect prices?

– If the game is infinitely repeated, under what discount factor B would full collusion be obtainable according to standard game theory.