Location and Entry Deterrence Flashcards

1
Q

What were the barriers to entry the Office of Fair Trading found in the Supermarket industry in 2006?

A
  • shortage of land around town centres
  • complex and time consuming to obtain planning permission
  • large supermarkets acted strategically when purchasing undeveloped land (sometimes the big firms were just buying this land to keep competitors out, not to actually build supermarkets)
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2
Q

What is a market study?

A

A short, sharp look into a market to work out if there are any competition concerns going on. These can last about 6 months.

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3
Q

What is a market investigation?

A

If there is competition concerns going on, the market authorities can pour more resources in and come up with remedies to fix the problem. These can last 2 years.

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4
Q

What did the competition commission report in 2008?

A

There were 2 of 4 major recommendations:

  • prevent land agreements that restrict entry by competitors
  • the inclusion of a ‘competition test’ in planning decisions

The test was for a firm which already owns a store in a local market:

-the firm can only open a new store if:

–when there are 3>= firms in the town, when its market share <60%

–when there are 4 or more firms in the town

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5
Q

Federal Trade Commission complaint for Ready-to-Eat cereal market (1972)

A

Firms included: Kellogg’s (45%), Gen Mills (21%), Gen Foods (16%), Quaker Oats (9%)

1950-1972: biggest firms had introduced 80 new brands, none from entrants

  • “These practices of proliferating brands, differentiating similar products and promoting trademarks… result in high barriers to entry”
  • Proposed structural remedy; create 5 new firms from divestments of big 3
  • The case was dismissed in 1982 due to no conspiracy to deter entry through brand proliferation since it can occur naturally from competition
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6
Q

Hotelling Model

A
  • Assume a beach of length 1
  • Number of sunbathers, M = 1
  • Each sunbather demands at most 1 ice cream from sellers
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7
Q

What is the utility of a consumer in the Hotelling Model?

A
  • The utility of a consumer located at 0(theta) who purchases from firm i (located at 0i) is U(0,0i) = V - T(Di) - pi
  • -where V is the benefit from consuming the ice cream, T(Di) is the cost of travelling distance Di (0-0i), pi is the price of the ice cream
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8
Q

How do we draw a diminishing utility graph for customers as they get further from 0 or 1?

A
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9
Q

Fixed Simultaneous Entry assumptions

A
  1. 2 firms, A&B, setting p>=0
  2. Prices are exogenous (firms don’t control them) & at a level consumers will purchase ( V-k>=p)
  3. Marginal costs c
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10
Q

What are firm i’s profits in fixed simultaneous entry?

A

profit = (p-c)q = q

because p-c=1

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11
Q

What is firm i’s demand if it is the furthest firm to the left?

A

ij)/2

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12
Q

What is firm i’s demand if it is the furthest to the right?

A

1 - (0i+0j)/2

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13
Q

What is the marginal consumer?

A

The marginal consumer is the consumer who is indifferent between firms i and j based on their location

This implies they are located at (θAB)/2

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14
Q

When will the marginal consumer visit firm A?

A

When they are offered greater utility from firm A

i.e. V-T(DA)-p>V-T(DB)-p

or T(DB)>T(DA)

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15
Q

Random graphs I’ll figure out later

A
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16
Q

another one

A
17
Q

another one

A
18
Q

What is the principle of minimum differentiation?

A

Firms tend to locate close to each other

19
Q

What is the socially optimal location for a market with two firms?

A

θi = 0.25 or θj = 0.75

20
Q

Why is this socially optimal?

A

This is because moving the firm from 0.5 to 0.25 reduces the total travel cost

Consumers located at 0.25 don’t need to travel, consumers at 0 only need to travel 0.25 instead of 0.5

21
Q

Issues with Harold Hotelling’s Model

A
  • Ice cream sellers aren’t located in the same place, they are dotted around everywhere
  • This is because prices aren’t exogenous; firms do control their price
  • While ice cream vans may be able to move around, other firms generally are stuck where they locate themselves
22
Q

Assumptions of Endogenous Sequential Entry

A
  1. Any number of firms can enter the market at fixed cost f>0
  2. Prices still exogenous where p-c=1
  3. All consumers will purchase V-k>=p
23
Q

What is the timing on sequential entry?

A
24
Q

When will a firm N+1 enter the market?

A

profit > f

25
Q

What is the difference between a peripheral and interior firm?

A

Peripheral firms locate closest to 0 and 1, interior firms are firms located between the peripherals

26
Q

How do we draw a graph where firm N+1 enters the market as an interior firm?

A
27
Q

What is the third firm’s demand if it enters as an interior firm?

A

θ21/2

28
Q

What is the necessary condition for free-entry Nash equilibrium in locations?

A
29
Q

How is a firm trying to enter as a peripheral blocked out of the market?

A
30
Q

How is a firm trying to enter the interior deterred?

A
31
Q

What is firm i’s maximum demand without inviting entry?

A

qii-i) = 2f

32
Q

What are the symmetric Nash Equilibrium locations?

A