major difference between monopoly and oligopoly

VinayKumarHS10 86 views 22 slides Mar 25, 2024
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About This Presentation

A monopoly and an oligopoly are market structures that exist when there is imperfect competition. A monopoly is when a single company produces goods with no close substitute, while an oligopoly is when a small number of relatively large companies produce similar, but slightly different goods. In bot...


Slide Content

Monopolistic Competition &
Oligopoly
Sanatan Sanbigrahi

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Monopolistic Competition
Characteristics of a monopolistically
competitive industry include:
1.Many sellers
2.Low barriers to enter
3.Differentiated products
4.Advertising on a local level
Microeconomics

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Monopolistic Competition
Examples of industries that are
monopolistically competitive include:
»Retail stores
»Gas Stations
»Restaurants
»Car Dealers
»Services (legal, financial, medical, haircuts)
Microeconomics

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Monopolistic Competition
Short-run economic profits
are possible.
Long-run economic profits are unlikely
because of unrestricted and relatively
easy access entry into industry.
Microeconomics

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Monopolistic Competition
Firms maximize profits where MC = MR in the
upward sloping portion of the MC curve, as
long as the price is greater than AVC.
See next slide for the short-run profit-
maximizing diagram.
Microeconomics

Price, MR,
AR, Costs
in Dollars
Quantity
Produced
MR
$6
$7
400
D (AR)
ATC
AVC
MC
MC=MR
Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Monopolistic Competition
In the long run, due to low barriers to enter,
firms in monopolistic competition earn zero
economic profits.
See next slide for the long-run profit-
maximizing diagram.
Microeconomics

Price, MR,
AR, Costs
in Dollars
Quantity
Produced
MR
Plr
Qlr
D (AR)
ATC
AVC
MC
Long-run
equilibrium
price
Long-run
equilibrium
quantity
MC=MR
Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Oligopoly (Several Sellers)
Characteristics of an oligopoly industry include:
1.A Few firms (2, 3, 4, ...) control the majority of
the sales
2.More difficult to start up (barriers to enter)
3.Firms are interdependent
4.Firms mostly advertise on a national scale
Microeconomics

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Oligopoly

Examples of oligopoly industries include:
»Automobile
»Beer
»Breakfast Cereal
»Soft Drinks
»Oil (Wholesalers)
»Steel
»Airlines
»Aircraft Manufacturers
»Internet Search
Microeconomics

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Oligopoly
Oligopoly firms maximize where MC = MR, in
the upward sloping part of the MC curve, as
long as price exceeds AVC.
Long-run profits are possible, because of
barriers to enter the industry.
Microeconomics

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Oligopoly
Because of interdependence, rival firms must
take each other’s actions into account.
What will firm A do when firm B increases its
price? What will firm A do when firm B
decreases its price?
Microeconomics

Which do you prefer?
0 of 30
1.Coca Cola
2.Pepsi Cola
3.Indifferent
4.Have never had a cola
5.Don’t drink colas now
6.Don’t know

If you were the president of Coca Cola, inc. and
Pepsi lowered its price, what would you do?
1.Keep the price of coke
the same
2.Raise the price of coke
3.Also lower the price of
coke
4.Not sure

If you were the president of Coca Cola, inc. and
Pepsi raised its price, what would you do?
1.Keep the price of coke
the same
2.Raise the price of coke
3.Lower the price of coke
4.Not sure

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Oligopoly
Let’s say that when firm B increases its price,
firm A does not change its price.
And let’s say that when firm B lowers its price,
firm A also lowers its price.
The demand curve for firm A will then be a
kinked demand curve.
Microeconomics

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Oligopoly
Firm A’s demand curve D1 is more elastic, because
when firm B raises its price above the current price of
$8, firm A does not raise it. Firm A gains significant
market share.
Firm A’s demand curve D2 is less elastic, because
when firm B lowers its price below $8, firm A lowers it
as well, and sales remain relatively constant.
Microeconomics

Price
Quantity
$8
D1
D2
D1
D2
$10
5
$6
$4
$2
64321 10789
MR2
MR1
Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Current
market
price

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Oligopoly and Game Theory
Game theory has become an important study
in microeconomics, particularly in explaining
oligopoly behavior.
See an example of game theory
simulation on the next slide.
Microeconomics
John
Nash

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Oligopoly and Game Theory
Microeconomics
B sets high priceB sets low price
A sets high priceA’s profit = $40
B’s profit = $40
A’s profit = $10
B’s profit = $60
A sets low priceA’s profit = $60
B’s profit = $10
A’s profit = $15
B’s profit = $15

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Oligopoly and Game Theory
What happens if firms start a price war?
Do firms have an incentive to collude
(cooperate and charge a high price)?
Microeconomics
P&G Olay anti-wrinkle creams

Unit 8 -Monopolistic
Competition and Oligopoly
Oligopoly and Collusion
The temptation to collude (cartel forming) is
greater in oligopoly than in other industries.
There are also barriers to collusion:
»High prices attract competitors from outside the
cartel.
»Rival firms can’t always agree on the terms.
»Cheating (charging a slightly lower price) is
profitable.
»There may be legal consequences.
Microeconomics
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