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Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION
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Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Apr 01, 2015

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Norman Winbush
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Page 1: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word

COMPETITION

Page 2: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Competition and Markets

Every business firm operates in a MARKET STRUCTURE

Page 3: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Copy this chart on a full sheet or 2 of paper:

Market Structure

# of Sellers

Types of Products

Barriers to Entry

Control Over Price

Examples

Perfect Competition

Monopoly

Monopolistic Competition

Oligopoly

Page 4: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Perfect Competition

• Many buyers and many sellers

• The market is perfectly transparent– Everyone has access to all relevant information

Page 5: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Perfect Competition

• All firms sell identical products.

Page 6: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Perfect Competition

• It’s easy to get into and out of the market.

Page 7: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Perfect Competition

• Sellers are price takersprice takers. They must sell their product at the equilibrium price and not one penny more

Page 8: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Perfect Competition

• A market may not satisfy one or more of the four conditions and still be perfectly competitive

• What determines whether a market is perfectly competitive or not is if firms (sellers) in the market are price takersprice takers.

Page 9: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Perfect Competition

• Wheat Market, Corn Market, Stock Market, other agricultural markets

Page 10: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Critical Thinking

• Some of the 200 firms in Market X, a perfectly competitive market, are incurring losses. How will these losses influence….

– seller’s entrance/exit to the market?– the supply of the good produced in the market?– the price of the good?

Page 11: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

• How can a seller determine whether or not they are a price takerprice taker?

• Can he/she sell any of the product for Can he/she sell any of the product for even one cent more than equilibrium even one cent more than equilibrium price?price?

Page 12: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word

MONOPOLY

Page 13: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Monopoly

• there is 1 seller.

Page 14: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Monopoly

• The product sold is UNIQUE – there are no close substitutes

Page 16: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Monopoly

• US postal service 1st class mail

• Vista Irrigation District

• Cox Cable

• historically:– Alcoa– DeBeers– Standard Oil– AT&T

Page 17: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Monopoly

• Monopolists are price searchersprice searchers. They can sell some of their product at various prices.

• The demand curve will determine how much they can sell and at what price.

• Price will be determined based upon their decision on how much to produce.

Page 18: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Market Structure

# of Sellers

Types of Products

Barriers to Entry

Control Over Price

Examples

Perfect Competition

many identical Low or none

Price takers

Monopoly 1 Unique Extremely

highPrice searchers

Monopolistic Competition

Oligopoly

Page 19: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

OXYMORON ???

• CONSTANT VARIABLE• TERRIBLY GOOD• VEGETARIAN MEATBALL• THUNDERING SILENCE• GOING NOWHERE• JUMBO SHRIMP• ANTI-MISSILE MISSILE• HOPELESSLY OPTIMISTIC

Page 20: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Monopolistic Competition

• shares characteristics of both perfectly competitive and monopoly markets.

Page 21: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Monopolistic Competition

• there are many buyers and sellers

Page 22: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Monopolistic Competition

• Firms sell slightly differentiated products

Page 23: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Monopolistic Competition

• Easy entry and exit from the market

Page 24: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Monopolistic Competition

• Price Searchers

• They can sell some of their products at various prices because they sell slightly differentiated products.

• They decide how much to produce by searching for the price where they can sell all of their output

Page 25: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Monopolistic Competition

• Burgers

• Clothing

• Coffee Houses

• Gas Stations

• Cosmetics

• Movie Theaters

• Auto Mechanics

Page 26: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Competitors and Monopoly

• Many businesses would like to become a monopoly

– they advertise perceived differences

• Competition depends on two factors:1. How close to unique the product is

2. How easy it is for sellers to enter the market

Page 27: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

With your neighbor…

• Think about a monopolistically competitive company from which you have made a recent purchase.– What are the substitutes’ prices?

• Why can there be a range of prices?

– Why did you purchase the one you did?

Page 28: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Oligopoly

•Name five American car manufacturers

Page 29: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Oligopoly

• There are few sellers.

• A few sellers account for a large percentage of sales

Page 30: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Oligopoly

• Firms produce identical or slightly differentiated products.

Page 31: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Oligopoly

• Entry into the market is difficult.• low per-unit costs• patents • control of resources

Page 32: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Oligopoly

• Price SearchersPrice Searchers• slightly differentiated products• difficult to get in the market • the few sellers may be able to control price through

agreement or cooperative action– cartel agreements (illegal)

Page 33: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Oligopoly

• cars

• cereal

• airlines

• entertainment

Page 34: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Identifying Oligopoly Industries• Economist determine whether a market is an oligopoly by

looking at the percentage of sales accounted for by the top four firms in the industry– 6 major film studios = 90% of revenue

• 20th century, Warner Brothers, Paramount, Columbia, Universal, Walt Disney• Dreamworks (Viacom bought—owned by Paramount)

– 2008 became independent again but distributed by Disney• Leading Indies: Lionsgate, Summit Entertainment, MGM (former Biggie!)

– 4 music companies = 80% of revenue• Sony, EMI, Universal, Warner

– 6 book publishers – 3 television networks (1950-1970)

• ABC/Disney• CBS• NBC Universal• 2 added since

– Time Warner– News Corporation (FOX)

– Food processors: Kraft, Nestle, PepsiCo

Page 35: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Market Structure

# of Sellers

Types of Products

Barriers to Entry

Control Over Price

Examples

Perfect Competition

many identical Low or none

Price takers

Monopoly 1 Unique Extremely

highPrice searchers

Monopolistic Competition

Many Slightly differentiated

Easy entry

Price searchers

Oligopoly Few sellers

Identical or slightly differentiated

Difficult

entry

Price Searchers

Page 36: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Review

• Firm A is a perfectly competitive firm. Why can’t it sell its product for one penny higher than equilibrium price?

• Buyers would know that they could buy Buyers would know that they could buy that identical product for the cheaper price. that identical product for the cheaper price. Why would they pay one penny more? Why would they pay one penny more?

Page 37: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Review

• To become an attorney, a lawyer must pass the bar examination. Is the bar examination a barrier to entry in the law market?

• YesYes

Page 38: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Review

• Firms in a monopolistic competitive market produce slightly differentiated products. How might these products be differentiated?

• Besides differences in product, they could be Besides differences in product, they could be sold in different locations, by different people, in sold in different locations, by different people, in a store, online or by phone. They can be a store, online or by phone. They can be bundled with different services or sales bundled with different services or sales conditions.conditions.

Page 39: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Review

• How can profits be “competed away” in a perfectly competitive market?

• It’s an easy market to enter. When It’s an easy market to enter. When businesses see the high profits, they enter businesses see the high profits, they enter the market. More supply lowers the the market. More supply lowers the price…price…

Page 40: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Review

• What are the two major factors that decide how much competition a firm faces?

• How close to unique is the product?How close to unique is the product?

• How easy is it to get into the market for How easy is it to get into the market for this product?this product?

Page 41: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

“Stupid is as stupid does.”As you watch the clip from “Forest Gump,” note the process

related to Bubba Gump Shrimp’s position in the shrimping market.

1. Before the hurricane, how does the shrimping industry resemble a perfectly competitive market?

2. How does the hurricane change the market price and quantity of shrimp? (Use supply & demand graphs to illustrate.)

3. How did the hurricane create a monopoly for Bubba Gump Shrimp? Use the characteristics of a monopoly to support your answer.

4. Do you think Forest can maintain his monopoly status over time? (In other words, are there barriers to entry?) Explain.

Page 42: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.
Page 43: Turn to your partner and tell them three words you think of when you hear the word COMPETITION.

Homework

MyVote California• Research your assigned topic.

– Be prepared to develop a short 2-3 minute presentation with your group outlining the five parties on the gubernatorial and senatorial race.

• Select one:» American Independent» Green» Peace and Freedom» Libertarian

• Democratic and Republican--all

• Company Analysis Sheets (Stock Market Part I) due Friday, October 22.