Exam-3 Chapter 9 Imperfect Competition And Mulitinational Corporation Flashcards
(87 cards)
Multinational corporations
Firm that operates through out the world
Product differentiation
Means that the goods produced by a business are perceived by the consumers to be different from the goods produced by their competitors.
Substitutes
Gods that can be used in place of each other
In perfect competition, the goods are
Perfect substitutes, that is, they are identical.
Product differentiation means that
Goods are imperfect substitutes
Why do consumers feel that some goods arebetter than other goods ?
Because of quality, physical characteristics or image. Perception is just as powerful as fact.
When does ultimate product differentiation occur
When goods that are technically substitutes to the casual observer are no longer regarded as such.
Example: some people buy Ford pickups would never buy a Chevy.
Or some drink Pepsi and refuse to drink coke.
What will strong product differentiation create
Huge competitive advantages for the firm and disadvantages for the competitors.
What are the advantages of product differentiation
Both advantages are related to price.
- consumers will be less price sensitive when product differentiation is strong. Economists would say product differentiation makes the demand for a good less elastic. To the business, it means that they can charge higher prices without significantly affecting the quantity demanded.
- It allows firms to compete using factors other than price called non - price competition. While a firm can compete only on the basis of price, where product differentiation exists, the price is often less important than quality, service, features, image, and other non monetary factors. Example: local restaurants compete on the basis of taste of their food and their services, in addition to price.
Monopolistic competitors
Are small businesses with differentiated products.
What are the assumptions of Monopolistic competitors
- Many are small firms. - so small that that the action of 1 firm does not impact more than a small portion of the market.
- Differentiated products- the products of these firms are close, but not perfect substitutes.
- Free entry and exit of firms- there are no barriers to entry of her firms into this market, nor are existing firms prevented from going out of business.
Monopolistic competitive firms include
Restaurant, hair salons, convenience stores, and lawn care business.
Are multi billion dollar industries or chain stores like McDonald’s or Burger King , monopolistic competitors or not?
Yes , for the most part each restaurant is part of the monopolistic competitive industry. Those that are part of the national chains, will have advantages over their competitors.
Just like a competitive firm, a monopolistic competition will find its its highest profit at
The point where marginal revenue is equal to marginal costs.
What is the difference between the competitive firm and monopolistic competition
The difference is in how the price is determined.
Competitive firm - is a price taker, for whom price is constant and equal to marginal revenue.
Monopolistically competitive firm- is a price searcher. It has control over its price. This control comes from product differentiation. Some consumers will be willing to pay more for a particular product than for its substitutes.
Why is the ability of a monopolistic competitive firm , to control its prices limited?
As there are so many firms in a monopolistically competitive industry that the effect of the product differentiation is typically small.
The firm faces tremendous competition for the consumers dollar, and so many competitors selling in so many different ways, that the firms prices are likely to be similar.
Price discrimination
Small sandwich stores offering senior or student discounts ( third degree discrimination) or buy 10 get one free deals ( second degree discrimination)
In the short run, the monopolistically competitive firm may earn
An economic profit.
The existence of product differentiation helps this firm, compared to a competitive firm, because the ability to differentiate and adjust prices gives it a greater opportunity to create an economic profit.
In the long run, monopolistically competitive firms must remember that
There are many firms and free entry of new firms. Any formula that is successful in the short run will be copied by existing and new firms. So this firm can expect only a normal profit in the long run.
Just as with the competitive firm, this is because of the entry of new firms into the market.
A firm in monopolistic competition,such as a restaurant
Will always face tremendous pressure from competitors, must continually differentiate its produce, and can expect profits to be in jeopardy from time to time. And it means, that poorly run firms will not survive long.
In a monopolistically competitive firm, what is larger, price or marginal revenue?
Price will be larger than marginal revenue for the monopolistically competitive firm.
Summarize monopolistic competition
- Output will be slightly lower [restricted] compared with the competitive solution, except where price discrimination increases the level of output. This is always true when P>MR, because we always set MC =MR to maximize profit.
- Price will be higher than marginal cost, since the firm is a price searcher. This means the firm will not be resource allocative efficient,
unless price just a nation is used to mitigate the outcome and set
P= MC, but this is extremely unlikely. - Price will not be equal to the lowest possible average total cost because the firm faces a U-shaped ATC curve, and it restricts Output, the monopolistically competitive firm Will not be able to reach productive efficiency either.
monopolistically competitive firms
Will charge higher prices
Produce lower levels of outputs
Produce at higher cost per unit
Be generally less efficient
What are the characteristics of an oligopoly
- The industry consist of only a few firms. There is no specific number of firms, other than at least two, but there is a test. The number of firms must be few enough that the firms are interdependent.
- The forms in an oligopoly are interdependent. This means that action of one firm affects the other.
- Strong barriers to entry and exit. It is difficult or impossible to start a new business in this industry.