3.4.4 Oligopoly Flashcards

1
Q

Oligopoly

A

An oligopoly is an industry dominated by a few large firms (high concentration ratios) and interdependence of firms
- For example, an industry with a five-firm concentration ratio of greater than 50% is considered an oligopoly.

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2
Q

Characteristics of oligopoly

A
  • high barriers to entry and exit
  • high concentration ratio
  • interdependence of firms and strong incentive to collude (actions of one firms affects another)
  • product differentiation
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3
Q

Calculation of n-firms concentration ratios and their significance

A
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4
Q

Collusive behaviour

A
  • occurs if firms agree to work together on something.
  • E.g might choose to set a price or fix the quantity of output they produce = minimises the competitive pressure they face.
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5
Q

Reasons for collusive behaviour

A
  • Firms in an oligopoly have a strong incentive since can maximise their own benefits & restrict their output, = the market price to increase = deters new entrants and is anti-competitive.
  • Moreover, there should be consumer inertia. All of these factors make the market stable.
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6
Q

Overt collusion

A
  • when a formal agreement is made between firms.
  • It works best when there are only a few dominant firms, so one does not refuse.
  • It is illegal in the EU, US and several other countries.
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7
Q

Tacit collusion

A

when there is no formal agreement, but collusion is implied.
- forms of tacit collusion is price leadership,

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8
Q

High concentration

A

a few large firms dominate
- high market share of some firms

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9
Q

Costs of collusion

A
  • loss of consumer welfare
  • fall in efficiency
  • increases barriers to entry
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10
Q

Costs of collusion (loss of consumer welfare)

A

Since prices are raised and output is reduced

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11
Q

Costs of collusion (fall in efficiency)

A

the absence of competition means efficiency falls
- this increases the average cost of production

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12
Q

Costs of collusion (increases barriers to entry)

A

It reinforces the monopoly power of existing firms and makes it hard for new firms to enter

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13
Q

Benefits of collusion

A
  • improve in industry standards
  • excess profits
  • exploit economies of scale
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14
Q

Benefits of collusion (improve industry standards)

A

Industry standards could improve. This is especially true in the pharmaceutical industry and for car safety technology.
This is because firms can collaborate on technology and improve it.

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15
Q

Benefits of collusion (excess profits)

A

Excess profits could be used for investment, which might improve efficiency in the long run.
Alternatively, they might be used on dividends.

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16
Q

Benefits of collusion (exploit economies of scale)

A

By increasing their size, firms can exploit economies of scale, which will lead to lower prices.

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17
Q

Cartels

A

A formal agreement between firms to limit competition in the market by controlling prices, limit output, or prevent the entrance of new firms into the market.
- A famous example of a cartel is OPEC, which fixed their output of oil. This was possible since they
controlled over 70% of the supply of oil in the world. This reduces uncertainty for
firms, which would otherwise exist without a cartel.

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18
Q

Impact of cartels

A

Cartels can lead to higher prices for consumers and restricted outputs. Some cartels
might involve dividing the market up, so firms agree not to compete in each other’s
markets.

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19
Q

Price leadership

A

occurs when one firm changes their prices, and other firms follow.
- This firm is usually the dominant firm in the market/has best knowledge of prevailing market conditions
- Other firms are often forced into changing their prices too, otherwise they risk losing their market share.
This explains why there is price stability in an oligopoly; other firms risk losing market
share if they do not follow the price change.

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20
Q

Dominant strategy

A
  • the option which is best, regardless of what the other person chooses.
  • This is for both prisoners to confess, since this gives the minimum number of years that they have to spend in prison. It is the most likely outcome.
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21
Q

Nash Equilibrium

A

a concept in game theory which describes the optimal strategy
for all players, whilst taking into account what opponents have chosen. They cannot
improve their position given the choice of the other.

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22
Q

Instability of nash equilibrium

A

However, even if both prisoners agree to deny, each one has an incentive to cheat and therefore confess, since this could reduce their potential sentence from 2 years to 1 year. This makes the Nash equilibrium unstable.

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23
Q

Types of pricing strategies/price competition

A
  • Price wars
  • Predatory pricing
  • Limit pricing
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24
Q

Types of price competition (price wars)

A

Occurs in markets where non-price competition is weak (goods may be weakly branded)
- involves firms constantly cutting their prices below that of its competitors
- Their competitors then lower their prices to match. Further price cuts by one firm will lead to more and more firms cutting their prices.
- e.g the UK supermarket industry

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25
Q

Types of pricing strategies/price competition (predatory pricing)

A

https://www.tutor2u.net/economics/reference/exam-answer-predatory-pricing
- Predatory pricing is illegal
- Firms price their g/s below their avc to drive out rivals firms out of the market to achieve market dominance in long run
- In the short run = them making losses but in long run, once firms leave, the remaining firms raise their prices slowly above previous competitive levels to regain their losses from where P < AVC

26
Q

Types of price competition (limit pricing)

A

This is not necessarily illegal.
- price is set below the AC of potential rivals to prevent new competitors entering the market
- It ensures the price of a good is below that which a new firm entering the market would be able to sustain.
- Potential firms are therefore unable to compete with existing

27
Q

Types of non-price competition

A
  • advertising and branding
  • brand proliferation
  • loyalty schemes
  • innovation leading to new product development
28
Q

Highly concentrated market

A
  • high market share of some firms where a few large firms dominate
  • uncompetitive
  • Firms can set prices control output
  • Interdependent (1)
  • High barriers to entry/exit (1) low contestability (1)
29
Q

Types of pricing strategies/price competition (predatory pricing) evaluation

A

It won’t work with brand loyalty
- predatory pricing is anti-competitive and therefore potentially illegal
- May lead to fines up to 10% of worldwide turnover
- depends on whether rivals are small and financially weak. If they also have a diverse portfolio of product/operate in a number of markets or have large cash reserves in the bank,they may respond by slashing their own price below AVC

30
Q

How is a firm able to make a loss and still survive (predatory pricing)

A

In the short run, cross-subsidisation of losses (multi-product firms)

31
Q

Predatory pricing example

A

In 2005 Tesco was accused of predatory pricing by the Association of Convenience Stores. They are opening small grocery outlets to serve a local community. Independent grocery stores have traditionally served this market (equivalent of 40% discount).
- designed to force small grocers out of the market

32
Q

Types of price competition (limit pricing) evaluation

A
  • considering how the low profits of existing firms might dissatisfy shareholders, since they receive lower dividends
  • opportunity cost = lowered quality, lowered spending on R&D
  • can lead to price wars if there are lots of firms in the market
33
Q

Incumbent

A

Established firm

34
Q

Predatory pricing example

A
  • In 1994, Darlington Bus Wars case
  • Stagecoach offered free bus travel to try and drive the Darlington Bus Company out of business.
  • DBC was driven out leaving monopoly power left in the market
  • Over the next decade, bus use in area fell by almost 40%
  • Societal harm: consumers only benefiting from free rides in the short term before having to endure higher prices in long term = less bus more cars =more pollution
35
Q

Sunk cost

A

Costs which aren’t recuperable

36
Q

Brand proliferation (non price strategies)

A
  • branding = aim to increase the loyalty to a brand = makes demand for a good more price inelastic
37
Q

Advertising and branding (non price strategies)

A
  • More well known = influence consumer preference
  • ## goods appears to have unique characteristics (real or imagined)
38
Q

Advertising and branding/loyalty schemes evaluation

A
  • will increase AC and is a sunk cost
  • may be time lags
  • PED
39
Q

Innovation evaluation (non price strategies)

A
  • will increase AC and is a sunk cost
  • may be time lags
  • very uncertain
  • PED
40
Q

Innovation (non price strategy)

A
  • quality of service/goods
  • e.g more available delivery times, keep shops open for longer
41
Q

Loyalty schemes (non price strategies)

A
  • special offers, loyalty cards, free gifts = attract consumers = increase demand
42
Q

Non price strategy graph

A
  • increase in demand is shift in curve
  • change in PED is rotation of demand curve
43
Q

Collusive oligopoly

A

A market with a high concentration ratio where a few interdependent firms cooperate, either formally or tacitly, to restrict competition

44
Q

Concentrated market

A

A market where most of the out is produced by a few firms and where therefore the concentration ratio is high

45
Q

Examples of over collusion

A
  • e.g it is often suspected that fuel companies partake in overt collusion. This could be in the form of price fixing,
46
Q

Why might firms participate in over collusion?

A

maximises their joint profits, cuts the cost of competition, such as by preventing firms using wasteful advertising, and reduces uncertainty.

47
Q

Result of collusive behaviour

A

Collusion = lower consumer surplus, higher prices and greater profits for the
firms colluding.

48
Q

When is collusion likely to happen?

A
  • Collusion is more likely to happen where there are only a few firms, they face similar costs, there are high entry barriers = it is not easy to be caught and there is an ineffective competition policy.
49
Q

How might collusion work against consumer & society’s interest?

A
  • firms collude to raise prices = reduce consumer surplus = reduce welfare= regressive also less competition = less dynamic efficiency
  • = pharmaceuticals = improve drugs
50
Q

What did the UK competition & markets say about collusion?

A

collusion can result in “reductions of output, efficiency, innovation and choice, all of which are harmful to consumers.”

51
Q

Example of of oligopolies reducing consumer

A

Apple, who were sued by consumers for price-fixing with publishers to force consumers to over pay for e-books.

52
Q

Evaluation of collusion leading to reduced consumer surplus

A
  • tacit collusion includes firms who monitor what other firms sell to ensure that they are matching the cheapest price in geographic area
  • may also result in driving down of price as firms seek to match improvement in cost efficiencies made by other firms
  • (e.g mobile phone contracts where it is easy to compare prices)
53
Q

Evaluation of collusion helping develop drugs

A
  • depends on othe factors
  • e.g majority of collusion that takes place isn’t firm working together
  • benefits that come from firms working together are dependent on those firms passing those cost savings onto consumers (might spend on dividends)
  • benefits likely small compared due to regulators
54
Q

Example of firms colluding but it not benefiting consumers

A

in 2017, US firms spent more money on share buy-backs than they did on research and development.

55
Q

What will the extent of impact of collusion on consumers depend on?

A
  • depends fundamentally on how long the oligopoly is able to carry on collusion (game theory) - Nash equilibrium
  • Assuming the following pay offs in a cartel such as OPEC, where states agree to collude to reduce production levels and benefit from a higher price:
56
Q

Example of anti-competitive behaviour (drugs)

A
  • Aug 2015
  • Pfizer and Flynn Pharm charged ‘excessive and unfair prices’ for an anti-epilspegy drugs inflating the annual NHS drugs bill by tens of millions of pounds
57
Q

Impact of high level of advertising spending in oligopoly

A
  • Traditional & digital advertising are common features of non-price competition between businesses in an oligopolistic market.
  • In part this is because of the interdependent nature of decision-making in this market structure.
  • Firms have to consider what their rivals are choosing to do, and game theory suggests that the Nash equilibrium might be for firms to spend heavily on advertising if rivals are doing likewise to prevent a loss of market share, sales revenue and, ultimately, operating profits. But to what extent is a high level of advertising beneficial for consumers and society as a whole?
58
Q

Example of collusive industry

A

Mobile phone network

59
Q

Why might a firm in an oligopolistic market prefer to engage in non-price competition rather than price competition?

A

The demand for the good is likely to be inelastic in relation to a price rise

60
Q

Aims of business collusion

A
  • businesses in a cartel recognise their mutual interdependence & act together (to maximise joint profits)
  • collusion lowers the costs of competition (e.g wasteful marketing wars which can run into millions of pounds)
  • collusion reduces uncertainty in a market & higher profits = producer surplus