Topic 20: Monopolistic Competition
Topic 20: Monopolistic Competition
Topic 20: Monopolistic Competition
Monopolistic competition
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
– Oligopoly
• A few sellers, each offering a similar or identical product.
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MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
Number of firms?
Many
firms
Type of products?
Monopolistic Perfect
Monopoly Oligopoly competition competition
(today)
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
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MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION IN
THE SHORT RUN
• In the short-run monopolistically competitive
firms, operate exactly as monopolists.
– They take advantage of the downward-sloping
demand that they face.
– They select output so MR=MC.
– If, at this point, price exceeds average total cost,
the firm makes a profit.
• The firm produces profit maximising output
– If, at this point, price is less than average total
cost, the firm makes a profit.
• The firm produces loss minimising output
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MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION IN
THE SHORT RUN
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION IN
THE SHORT RUN
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MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION IN
THE LONG RUN
• Unlike monopoly, monopolistically competitive
firms cannot sustain their profits in the long run
as there is free entry.
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION IN
THE LONG RUN
• Firms will continue to enter until all are making
exactly zero economic profits.
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MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION IN
THE LONG RUN
• Conversely, monopolistically competitive firms
do not sustain losses in the long run as there is
free exit.
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION IN
THE LONG RUN
• Firms will continue to exit until all that remain
are making exactly zero economic profits.
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MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION IN
THE LONG RUN
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION IN
THE LONG RUN
• Notice that the demand curve just touches the
average total cost curve.
– The two curves are tangential to each other.
– i.e. P = AC
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MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION IN
THE LONG RUN
• Two characteristics
– As in monopoly, P > MC ( it is a ‘mark-up’ on MC).
• Profit maximisation requires MR = MC.
• The downward-sloping demand however makes
MR < price.
MONOPOLISTIC VS PERFECT
COMPETITION
• Since P > MC under monopolistic competition
the price charged is higher than that charged
under perfect competition (the social optimum;
P = MC).
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MONOPOLISTIC VS PERFECT
COMPETITION
• That a monopolistic competitive firm prices
‘too high’ means that it produces too little
– it produces less than a competitive firm would.
MONOPOLISTIC VS PERFECT
COMPETITION
• Thus a monopolistically competitive firm
operates with excess capacity.
– The quantity of output at this point is smaller than
the efficient scale.
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MONOPOLISTIC VS PERFECT
COMPETITION
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MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION AND
THE WELFARE OF SOCIETY
• Monopolistic competition doesn’t have the
desirable properties of perfect competition.
– One source of inefficiency is the mark-up of price
over marginal cost, creating a deadweight loss.
– The other source of inefficiency is the excess
capacity
REGULATION OF MONOPOLISTIC
COMPETITION
• Provided that demands are not very inelastic
– the DWLs due to mark-up pricing will not be large.
– the inefficiencies associated with excess capacity will
also not be high.
• Since policymakers would need to regulate a
large number of firms that produce differentiated
products.
– the administrative burden of such regulation would be
overwhelming.
• Perhaps best not to regulate
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MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION AND
THE WELFARE OF SOCIETY
• Another way in which monopolistic competition
may be socially inefficient is that the number of
firms in the market may not be ‘ideal’.
• Whenever a new firm considers entering the
market with a new product, it considers only
the profit it would make.
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ADVERTISING
• When firms sell differentiated products or
unique products each firm has an incentive to
advertise to attract more buyers to its particular
product.
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THE DEBATE ABOUT ADVERTISING
• In defence of advertising:
– Advertising provides information to customers.
• Advertising conveys the prices of the goods being offered
for sale, the existence of new products and the locations of
retail outlets.
• The availability of this information can increase competition
by allowing consumer to more readily compare the
offerings of different firms.
– The signalling theory states that an advertiser
signals the quality of its product by its willingness to
spend money on advertising.
• Expensive advertising will only be profitable if the product
is high quality and consumers buy repeatedly.
BRAND NAMES
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THE DEBATE ABOUT BRAND NAMES
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SUMMARY
• A monopolistically competitive market is
characterised by three attributes: many firms,
differentiated products & free entry (or exit).
SUMMARY
• Monopolistic competition does not have all of
the desirable properties of perfect competition.
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SUMMARY
• The product differentiation inherent in
monopolistic competition leads to the use of
advertising & brand names.
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