Monopolistic Comp
Monopolistic Comp
Monopolistic Comp
Chapter 16-1
Introduction
Market structure is the focus real-world competition. Market structure refers to the physical characteristics of the market within which firms interact.
Introduction
Market structure involves the number of firms in the market and the barriers to entry.
Introduction
Perfect competition, with an infinite number of firms, and monopoly, with a single firm, are polar opposites. Monopolistic competition and oligopoly lie between these two extremes.
Introduction
Monopolistic competition is a market structure in which there are many firms selling differentiated products. There are few barriers to entry.
Introduction
Oligopoly is a market structure in which there are a few interdependent firms. There are often significant barriers to entry.
16-8
Product Differentiation
Product differentiation implies that the products are different enough that the producing firms exercise a minimonopoly over their product. The firms compete more on product differentiation than on price. Entering firms produce close substitutes, not an identical or standardized product.
Monopolistic Competition
The four distinguishing characteristics of monopolistic competition are:
Many sellers. Differentiated products. Multiple dimensions of competition. Easy entry of new firms in the long run.
Many Sellers
When there are many sellers, they do not take into account rivals reactions. The existence of many sellers makes collusion difficult. Monopolistically competitive firms act independently.
Differentiated Products
The many sellers characteristic gives monopolistic competition its competitive aspect. Product differentiation gives monopolistic competition its monopolistic aspect.
Differentiated Products
Differentiation exists so long as advertising convinces buyers that it exists. Firms will continue to advertise as long as the marginal benefits of advertising exceed its marginal costs.
Monopolistic Competition
Price
MC ATC PM
MR
0 QM
D Quantity
PMC PPC
In monopolistic competition in the long run, P > min ATC, In perfect competition in the long run, P = min ATC Outcome: Monopolistic competition output is lower and price is higher than perfect competition
DPC
DMC MRMC
QMC QPC
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Nonprice Competition
The firm attempts to establish its product as a different product from that offered by its rivals.
Differentiation means that in the consumers mind, the product is not the same. Marketing is often the key to successful differentiation.
Nonprice Competition
Firms may differentiate products by perceived quality, reliability, color, style, safety features, packaging, purchase terms, warranties and guarantees, location, availability (hours of operation) or any other features.
Brand names may signal information regarding the product, reducing consumer risk.
Goals of Advertising
The goals of advertising include shifting the demand curve to the right and making it more inelastic. Advertising shifts the ATC curve up.
A brand name is valuable to a firm; it makes the demand less elastic and can enable the firm to earn higher profits.
Brand Name
Once a consumer has had a positive experience with a good, the price elasticity of demand for that good typically decreasesthe consumer becomes loyal to the product.