Ch13 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
Ch13 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
Ch13 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
13
Monopolistic Competition and
Oligopoly
Monopolistic Competition
A monopolistically competitive
industry has the following
characteristics:
A large number of firms
No barriers to entry
Product differentiation
Monopolistic Competition
Monopolistic competition is a common
form of industry (market) structure in the
United States, characterized by a large
number of firms, none of which can influence
market price by virtue of size alone.
Some degree of market power is achieved
by firms producing differentiated products.
New firms can enter and established firms
can exit such an industry with ease.
Oligopoly
An oligopoly is a form of industry
(market) structure characterized by a
few dominant firms. Products may
be homogeneous or differentiated.
The behavior of any one firm in an
oligopoly depends to a great extent
on the behavior of others.
Oligopoly Models
All kinds of oligopoly have one
thing in common:
The behavior of any given
sell all they want at the price the leader has set.
Predatory Pricing
The practice of a large, powerful firm
driving smaller firms out of the
market by temporarily selling at an
artificially low price is called
predatory pricing.
Such behavior became illegal in the
United States with the passage of
antimonopoly legislation around the
turn of the century.
2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Game Theory
Game theory analyzes oligopolistic
behavior as a complex series of
strategic moves and reactive
countermoves among rival firms.
In game theory, firms are assumed
to anticipate rival reactions.
Contestable Markets
A market is perfectly contestable if
entry to it and exit from it are
costless.
In contestable markets, even large
oligopolistic firms end up behaving
like perfectly competitive firms.
Prices are pushed to long-run
average cost by competition, and
positive profits do not persist.
2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing