This document provides an overview of different market structures: perfect competition, monopolistic competition, monopoly, and oligopoly. It defines the key characteristics of each structure and provides examples. Perfect competition is characterized by many small firms, homogeneous products, free entry and exit, and price taking behavior. Monopolistic competition involves differentiated products, free entry/exit, and partial price control. Monopoly grants exclusive control to a single seller. Oligopoly features a small number of interdependent firms that may cooperate or compete.
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Module II - Part II..
This document provides an overview of different market structures: perfect competition, monopolistic competition, monopoly, and oligopoly. It defines the key characteristics of each structure and provides examples. Perfect competition is characterized by many small firms, homogeneous products, free entry and exit, and price taking behavior. Monopolistic competition involves differentiated products, free entry/exit, and partial price control. Monopoly grants exclusive control to a single seller. Oligopoly features a small number of interdependent firms that may cooperate or compete.
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MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS
MODULE- II PART- II
Analysis of Market Structures
PERFECT COMPETITION Perfect competition is a market structure where many firms offer a homogeneous product. Because there is freedom of entry and exit and perfect information, firms will make normal profits and prices will be kept low by competitive pressures. Characteristics of Perfect Competition: 1. Large number of buyers and sellers 2. Homogenous products 3. Free entry and exit 4. Perfect knowledge 5. Uniform price 6. Firms are price takers and not price makers. Price is determined by the market forces of demand and supply. 7. Mobility of factors of production 8. No transport cost 9. No government interference EXAMPLES OF PERFECT COMPETITION An Indian fish market .At the fish market, lots of sellers gather together to try to sell the same wares, and lots of customers try to buy them with a good knowledge of what they are buying. There is little to prevent someone from joining in on the selling or quitting the market altogether. A street food vendor EQUILIBRIUM PRICE AND OUTPUT DETERMINATION UNDER PERFECT COMPETITION Conditions of the equilibrium of the firm: 1. Marginal Revenue= Marginal Cost 2. MC curve should cut the MR curve from below. In other words, the slope of MC curve should be positive. MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION Monopolistic competition as a market structure was first identified in the 1930s by American economist Edward Chamberlin, and English economist Joan Robinson. Characteristics of Monopolistic Competition: 1. Large number of small firms 2. Similar but not identical products sold by the firms 3. Relative freedom of entry into and exit out of the industry 4. Lack of Perfect Knowledge 5. Firms have partial control over the price 6. Product Differentiation: Product differentiation refers to differentiating the products on the basis of brand, size, colour, shape, etc. The product of a firm is close, but not perfect substitute of other firm. differences in shape, flavour, colour, packing, after sale service, warranty period, etc. advertising). 7. Selling costs: According to Chamberlin, ‘Selling Cost is the cost which is incurred to alter the shape and position of the demand curve’. EXAMPLES OF MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION The restaurant business Hotels and pubs
Some restaurants enjoy monopolistic competition because
of their popularity and reputation. Cars
Newspapers
Toothpaste: Pepsodent, Colgate, Neem, Babool, etc.
Cycles: Atlas, Hero, Avon, etc.
Tea: Brooke Bond, Tata tea, Today tea, etc.
Soaps: Lux, Hamam, Lifebuoy, Pears, etc.
MONOPOLY Characteristics of monopoly: 1. Single seller 2. Monopoly is an industry 3. Restriction to entry 4. No close substitutes 5. Price maker 6. Price Discrimination: According to Mrs. John Robinson, ‘The act of selling the same article produced under a single control at different prices to different buyers is known as price discrimination’. It can be on the basis of income, use base electricity), time basis (call rates), geopgraphical basis and legal basis. EXAMPLES OF MONOPOLY Indian Railways has monopoly in Railroad transportation State Electricity board have monopoly over generation and distribution of electricity in many of the states. Hindustan Aeronautics Limited has monopoly over production of aircraft. There is Government monopoly over production of nuclear power. Operation of bus transportation within many cities.
Land line telephone service in most of the country is provided
only by the government run BSNL. TYPES OF MONOPOLY Natural Monopoly: Eg: Arab countries have monopoly in crude oil. Social Monopoly: Eg: Defence and Railways in India Legal Monopoly: Eg: Trade marks, copyrights and patents Discriminating monopoly: Eg: Doctors charging different rates from different customers Technological monopoly: E.g. engineering goods industry, automobile industry, software industry, etc. DIFFERENCE BETWEEN REVENUE CURVES OF MONOPOLY AND MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION OLIGOPOLY Oligopoly is a market situation in which there are a few sellers and many buyers. Oligopoly comprises of two terms: Oligoi which means a few Pollein which means sellers Characteristics of Oligopoly: 1. Few sellers 2. Firms are price makers and not price takers 3. Interdependence: Actions of one firm affects the others 4. Conflicting attitude i.e. attitude of cooperation and attitude of conflict. 5. Advertisement: According to Prof Boumol, ‘Advertising can become a life and death matter’ 6. Lack of uniformity 7. Competition COLLUSIVE OLIGOPOLY In case of collusive oligopoly, firms realise their interdependence and reached some agreement. The agreement may be formal or informal. Generally the agreement is informal because collusion is illegal in most of the countries. Types of collusive oligopoly: 1. Cartels and Margers: A cartel is a form of combination in which independent business firms in an industry agree to regulate their output, to fix sales quotas and to control sales contracts and prices. A cartel is a voluntary association formed with the objective of eliminating competition and to secure monopoly in the market. In case of mergers, firms willingly join together so as to become a large firm and have dominating position in the market. 2. Price leadership: In this case, firms formally or informally select one firm as leader and the actions of the leader firm are followed by others. If the leader firm raises the price, others also raise the price. Leadership can be on the basis of low cost firms, dominant firm or barometric price leadership. NON-COLLUSIVE OLIGOPOLY
In non-collusive oligopoly, firms do not cooperate, they
only compete. Firms do not reach any agreement and do not learn from past experience. The firm is in a highly interdependent situation, where a change in price will certainly lead to a reaction from other firms in the oligopoly. The model suggests the individual firm will arrive at the following; ‘If I raise my price nobody will follow since they will expect to steal my customers. If I lower my price everybody will follow in order to hinder me from stealing their customers! EXAMPLES OF OLIGOPOLY Airlines industry Petroleum refining
Power generation and supply in most of the parts of the
country Automobile industry
Long distance road transportation by bus. Many of there
routes have buses operated by limited numbers of operators. Mobile telephony.