Lecture 6

Cards (25)

  • Contestable markets

    Imply that industries which are not perfectly competitive can yield perfectly competitive price outcomes, subject to 'hit-and-run' entry and exit
  • Conditions for perfectly contestable markets
    • All potential entrants have access to the same technology as the incumbent
    • There are no sunk costs
    • Consumers respond instantaneously to prices
    • Incumbents cannot instantaneously change prices in response to entry
    • If conditions satisfied = market is perfectly contestable, incumbent does not have monopoly power
  • If P > 20
    • An entrant could capture the entire market and costlessly leave before the incumbent has time to react
    • Entry is common, and higher than market penetration
    • Large cross-sectional variation in entry - but these differences do not persist in the long-run
    • Entry and exit rates are highly positively correlated
  • Strategic barriers to entry
    Actions taken by incumbents to limit entry
    Limit price:
    • What is the max price (limit price) that an incumbent can charge which prevents entry;
    • Assume homogenous products…
    • Entrant believes incumbent will not alter price or quantity;
    Diagram:
    • Pl < Pm; Q1 > Qm
    • No level of residual demand which entry would be profitable
    • Criticisms: Threat by incumbent to maintain Pl, Q1 credible? (I.e. does it benefit the incumbent?)
  • Structural barriers to entry
    Basic industry conditions such as economies of scale, natural monopolies and network effects
  • If limit pricing is not credible post-entry

    Potential entrant (PE) would not be deterred
  • If products are homogenous, what happens if entry occurs?
    Both incumbent and entrant make losses
  • Crucial importance of uncertain’t about actual cost differences between incumbent and PE
    • Means limit pricing might be rational
    • Incumbent wants PE to believe post-entry prices will be low
    • PE knows incumbent’s payoffs from all possible post-entry pricing scenarios, then PE knows exactly what strategy incumbent will choose
    • But if PE is uncertain about post-entry price, incumbent’s strategy will affect PE’s expectations
    • High-cost incumbent could lower price to disguise its cost
    • Low-cost incumbent tried to signal PE that it has cost advantage - PE thinks only low-cost producer can price that low
  • PE learns of incumbent’s true cost
    • PE would know a high-cost incumbent has a strong incentive to represent true costs pre-entry
    • Seperating equilibrium: high and low-cost firms charge different prices in period 1 and his reveals incumbents true costs
    • Pooling equilibrium: high and low-cost firms charge same price in period 1, PE learns nothing about incumbent’s true costs until after entry
  • What makes limit pricing effective
    • PE must be uncertain about post-entry competition
  • Predatory pricing aim
    Aimed at firms already in industry; intended to force them to exit
    Typed:
    • Raising rival’s costs (marginal and fixed)
    • Investements to lower production costs
    • Utilising excess capacity
    Often illegal (anti-competitive)
  • ’The chain store paradox’ - Reinhard Selten
    Multiple potential entrants
    • Each entrant makes decision independent of other entrants
    Pay offs:
    • Incumbent can accommodate (cooperate) entry, payoffs are 2 or 5
    • If aggressive (fight) strategy is chosen payoffs are 0 and 5
  • The paradox
    • Selten assumed game played 20 times
    • In game 20, entrant knows that if he enters the incumbent’s rational policy is to accommodate entry so payoffs are 2,2
    • But this payoff must also hold in all previous stages of game
    • If game was played 20 times, total payoffs are 40 and 40
    • But policy does not maximise payoff to incumbent
    • Agressive strategy played in early stages of game miight deter current and future entrants
    • If incumbent was aggressive in first 10 games payoff would be 10 x 0 = 0 - future potential entrants would not enter as incumbent payoff would be (10x0 + 10x5)=50
  • Price discrimination
    Charging different consumers different prices;
    • Profound welfare implications
  • First degree price discrimination
    First degree price discrimination: complete transfer of consumer surplus to monopolist (no deadweight loss)
  • Second degree price discrimination
    Price paid per unit declines with the quantity purcahsed
    • Monopolist extracts some, but not all consumer surplus
    • In diagram, equilibrium indicates a competitive outcome, only applies to last unit (eighth) purchased
    • This type of discrimination is most common in utilities
  • Third degree price discrimination
    Price elasticity varies between groups of consumers;
    • Arbitrage is not permitted
    • This type of pricing is very common: student discounts; OAP discounts…
    • Group 1 has demand curve P = 200 - Q
    • Group 2 has demand curve P = 100 - Q
    • Group 1 has lower price elasticity than group 2
    • Price charged to group 1 > group 2
  • More general mathematical treatment
    πmax:MCa+\pi max: MCa+b=b =MRa+ MRa +MRb MRb
    • MC is marginal cost of producing total output, MRA and MRB are the marginal revenue functions in both market
    • MR=MR =P(1(1/B)) P(1- (1/ \in B))
    • Pa(1(1/a)=Pa (1-(1/ \in a) =Pb(1(1/b) Pb(1 - (1/ \in b)
    • Where Pa and Pb are prices in market a and b
    • AandB\in A and \in B
    • Are price elasticity in each market if 3a < 3b then 1/3a > 1/3b
    • therefore: (1-(1/3a)) < (1-(1/3b))
  • Perfect (first degree) price discrimination
    • Efficient
    • Same quantity is sold as would be sold by a competitive industry
    • Consumer surplus transferred to monopolist (but society is no worse off)
  • Second degree price discrimination
    • May generate results that are comparable to first degree price discrimination (no deadweight loss) compared to uniform pricing policy
    • Is not Pareto efficient
  • Third degree price discrimination
    • More difficult to assess
    • Need to consider total value of surplus with price discrimination compared to surplus without discrimination
  • Broader welfare issues of price discrimination
  • Other types of pricing to extract surplus
    Two part pricing:
    • Firm with market power changes a fixed fee and per unit charge for each unit purchased
    • This strategy yields comparable results to 1st degree price discrimination (all consumer surplus transferred to monopolist)
    • Assume; P = 10-Q, C(Q)=2Q
    • see next flash card
  • Two part pricing
    Top diagram shows standard monopoly situation
    • Triangle of consumer surplus = 0.5(10-6) x 4 = $8
    • Producer surplus = (6-2) x 4 = $16
    • Fixed fee of £32 and per unit charge $, is sufficient to transfer all consumer surplus to monopolist
    • With two part pricing there is no deadweight loss
    • All profits derived from the fixed fee
  • Block pricing
    • Packaging units of a product and selling them as one package
    • Not the same as second degree price discrimination - the consumer is not free to decide how many units to purchase - all or nothing decision
    • Only one price charged
    • See previous diagram
    • total value to consumer (8 x 2) + 0.5(10 - 2) x 8 = $48
    • Therefore, max price the monopolist can charge is $48, which yields a producer surplus of $32