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PRESENTED BY
Mohit Negi - 38
Ishant Khanna - 40
Prerna Chawla - 03
Gaurav Goyal - 34
Mir Arsalan Qazi - 58
Vrinda Sahni - 13
ALTERNATIVE
MARKET
STRUCTURES
What is a Market?
• An Area
• Buyers and Sellers
• One Commodity
• Free Competition
• One Price
Characteristics of a Market
What is Market
Structure?
• The number and nature of sellers
• The number and nature of buyers.
• The nature of the product.
• The conditions of entry into and exit from the
market.
• Economies of scale.
Determinants
• The market gives producers an incentive to
produce goods that consumers want.
• The market provides an incentive to acquire useful
skills.
• The market system involves a high degree of
economic freedom.
• Competition pushes businesses to be efficient:
keeping costs down and production high.
Advantages
• Market economies tend to produce a skewed
distribution of income (large gap between the rich
and the poor).
• Prices may give false or inadequate signals to
producers and consumers.
• A private market economy may be quite unstable
(unemployment, growth).
Disadvantages
Presented By
Ishant Khanna
Perfect Competition
• Perfect competition refers to a market structure in
which there are large number of buyers and sellers.
• The sellers sell identical products.
• No firm can influence the market price of the
product on its own.
• Sellers are price takers and not price makers.
Meaning
• Large number of buyers and sellers
• Homogenous product
• Independent decision making
• Freedom of entry and exit of the firms
• Perfect knowledge
• Absence of transport cost
Characteristics
• Under perfect competition, price of the commodity
is determined by the forces of market supply and
market demand.
• Equilibrium price of a commodity is determined at
that point where the market demand is equal to the
market supply.
Price Determination
Market
supply
Price per
unit
Market
demand
50
40
30
20
10
5
4
3
2
1
10
20
30
40
50
A firm in the short run may face three situations:
• It may earn super normal profits
• It may earn normal profits
• It may even suffer minimum losses
Short Run Equilibrium of the Firm
Supernormal Profit
Normal Profit
Minimum Loss
Long Run Equilibrium of the Firm
Presented By
Prerna Chawla
Monopoly
•It exists when one party controls
the supply of a good or service.
What is a Monopoly?
• No close substitute
• Restricted entry
• Price maker
• Price is an endogenous variable
• Price discrimination
Features of a Monopoly
• Created by patents
• Created by government laws
• Created by natural causes
Types of Monopoly
TR ,AR ,MR CURVE UNDER
MONOPOLY
TR ,AR ,MR CURVE UNDER MONOPOLY
OUTPUT PRICE TR AR MR
1 20 20 20 20
2 18 36 18 16
3 16 48 16 12
4 14 56 14 8
5 12 60 12 4
6 10 60 10 0
7 8 56 8 -4
8 6 48 6 -8
• Supernormal profits
• Break-even point
• Losses
Short Run Equilibrium
Supernormal Profits
Breakeven Point
Losses
• When MC is falling
• When MC is constant
• When MC is rising
Equilibrium in a Monopoly
Falling MC
Constant MC
Rising MC
• Indian Railways has a monopoly in railroad
transportation in India.
• There is government monopoly over production of
nuclear power.
• Public utilities like water, public buses etc.
Examples of a Monopoly
Presented By
Gaurav Goyal
Price Discriminating
Monopoly
• Price discrimination is the practice of charging a
different price for the same good or services.
• Types of price discrimination:
• First Degree
• Second Degree
• Third Degree
Definition
Monopsony
A monopsony means that there is one buyer and
many sellers.
Definition
Characteristics
Three characteristics of monopsony are:
• Single buyer
• No alternatives
• Barriers to entry
Bilateral Monopoly
• Bilateral monopoly is a market structure in which
there is only a single buyer and a single seller.
• E.g. trade unions and management.
Definition
Presented By
Mir Arsalan Qazi
Monopolistic
Competition
Monopolistic Competition is a type of imperfect
competition within an industry where:
• All firms produce similar yet not perfectly
substitutable products.
• All firms are able to enter the industry if the profits
are attractive.
• All firms are profit maximisers.
• All firms have some market power, which means
none are price takers.
Definition
There are four distinct characteristics:
1. Many sellers
2. Product differentiation
3. Multiple dimensions of competition
4. Ease of entry
Characteristics
• 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.
Many Sellers
• The “many sellers” characteristic gives
monopolistic competition its competitive aspect.
• Product differentiation gives monopolistic
competition its monopolistic aspect.
• 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.
Product Differentiation
• One dimension of competition is product
differentiation.
• Another is competing on perceived quality.
• Competitive advertising is another.
• Others include service and distribution outlets.
Multiple Dimensions of Competition
• There are no significant barriers to entry.
• Barriers to entry prevent competitive pressures.
• Ease of entry limits long-run profit.
Ease of Entry
Product examples include:
• Books
• CDs
• Movies
• Computer Games
• Restaurants
• Furniture, etc.
Examples
• Short run is a time period in which at least one
factor of production is fixed; long run is when all
factors of production are variable.
• Essentially, the difference between short and long
run equilibrium is that in short run equilibrium,
the firm can gain abnormal profits. Over the long
run, that is impossible.
Short Run and Long Run
Monopolistic Competition v/s Perfect Competition
Monopolistic Competition
• Prices are generally high.
• Firms have total control of the market.
• Firms control the market prices.
• Firms have total market share.
• Difficult entry and exit points.
• Barriers to entry are high.
• Generally involves a single seller.
• Buyers do not have a choice of where
to purchase their goods or services.
Perfect Competition
• Prices are dictated by supply and
demand.
• No one firm has total market control.
• Firms are all price takers.
• Firms have a small market share.
• Firms can enter and exit easily.
• Barriers to entry are relatively low.
• Has many buyers and sellers.
• Consumers are able to choose where
they buy their goods and services.
Product
Differentiation
• Product differentiation implies that the products are different
enough that the producing firms exercise a “mini-monopoly” over
their product.
• Each firm produces a product that is at least slightly different from
those of other firms.
• Differentiation looks to make a product more attractive by
contrasting its unique qualities with other competing products.
• It creates a competitive advantage for the seller, as customers view
these products as unique or superior.
• Rather than being a price taker, each firm faces a downward-sloping
demand curve.
• The firms compete more on product differentiation than on price.
Definition
There are two types of product differentiation:
1. Real
2. Perceived
Types of Product Differentiation
• The brand differences are usually minor; they can be
merely a difference in packaging or an advertising theme.
• Differentiation is due to buyers perceiving a difference.
• Causes of differentiation may be:
• Functional aspects of the product or service.
• How it is distributed and marketed.
• Who buys it.
Sources of Product Differentiation
The major sources of product differentiation are as follows:
• Differences in quality which are usually accompanied by differences
in price.
• Differences in functional features or design.
• Ignorance of buyers regarding the essential characteristics and
qualities of goods they are purchasing.
• Sales promotion activities of sellers and, in particular, advertising.
• Differences in availability (e.g. timing and location).
Sources of Product Differentiation
(contd.)
Presented By
Vrinda Sahni
Oligopoly
• It is a form of imperfect competition where a few big firms
compete for their homogeneous products (like cement,
steel & fertilizers) or differentiated products (like
automobile, computers).
• There is interdependence of firms with regard to price-
output decisions.
• Mostly, prices are stable.
• Entry of a new firm in the industry is quite difficult.
• In a way, position of oligopoly lies between that of
monopolistic competition and monopoly.
Definition
• A few firms
• Interdependence
• Selling costs
• Price rigidity
• Indeterminate demand curve
• Group behaviour
• Product
• Entry
Features
If there is only 1 firm – Monopoly
2 firms only – Duopoly
A few firms (2-20) – Oligopoly
A large number of firms – Monopolistic Competition
Pure Oligopoly Differentiated Oligopoly
(Occurs if the product is (Occurs if the products
homogeneous. Eg cement, are differentiated. Eg
steel, chemicals, cooking automobiles, computers)
Gas, basic metals & telecom
sector)
Types of Oligopoly
• Huge capital investment
• Absolute cost advantage to the existing firms
• Economies of large scale production
• Mergers
Factors Causing Oligopoly
Non- Collusive Oligopoly Collusive Oligopoly
It implies absence of It refers to market structure
explicit or implicit in which few firms cooperate
understanding or agreement to establish price and output
among the firms regarding levels in a particular market.
price fixation, market sharing
or leadership.
Oligopoly
• A cartel consists of a group of firms that have
explicitly and openly agreed to work together to set
the price that will be charged in a particular
market.
• A cartel also sets production quotas for each firm.
• The quotas are determined to ensure that price is
not driven below the agreed upon level.
• Cartels are often international.
• Cartels are illegal in the United States.
Collusive Oligopoly – Cartels
• The members should agree on price and
production levels and then abide by them.
• If the potential gains from cooperation are large,
cartel members will take initiative and measures to
solve their organizational problems.
• Total demand for the good must not be price
elastic.
• Cartel must control nearly all the world’s supply.
Conditions for Success of Cartels
• The most widely recognized example of a cartel is
the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC).
• OPEC is an international agreement among oil
producing countries which have succeeded in
raising world oil prices far above what they would
have been otherwise.
• Currently, the organization has twelve members,
namely:
• Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya,
Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and
Venezuela.
OPEC
• Total world’s demand for oil is price inelastic.
• OPEC controls a large part of world’s supply of oil.
• OPEC oil has low marginal cost of producing oil.
Reasons for Success of OPEC
• OPEC is a case of successful cartel as it has been able to
charge a price much above the competitive price.
• In 1970s, OPEC used its monopoly power to drive prices
much above the competitive levels. In the long-run,
OPEC’s demand curve will be much more elastic.
Reasons for Success of OPEC (contd.)
• CIPEC (Intergovernmental Council of Copper
Exporting Countries) initially constituted 4
members – Chile, Peru, Zambia and Congo.
• Four more were added in 1975 – Australia,
Indonesia, Papua New Guinea & Yugoslavia.
• Collectively they produced less than half of world’s
copper production.
• It was dissolved during the 1990’s
CIPEC
• Total world’s demand for copper is price elastic.
• CIPEC does not control a large part of world’s
supply of copper.
• CIPEC have high marginal cost of producing
copper.
Reasons for failure of CIPEC
• CIPEC is a case of unsuccessful cartel as it has not
been able to charge a price much above the
competitive price.
• CIPEC was not successful is raising price even in
the short-run because total demand and
competitive supply of copper is elastic.
• This made CIPEC’s monopoly power small.
Reasons for failure of CIPEC (contd.)
Payoff Matrix for the Two Prisoners
Thank You

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Market Structures Explained in Detail

  • 1. PRESENTED BY Mohit Negi - 38 Ishant Khanna - 40 Prerna Chawla - 03 Gaurav Goyal - 34 Mir Arsalan Qazi - 58 Vrinda Sahni - 13 ALTERNATIVE MARKET STRUCTURES
  • 2. What is a Market?
  • 3. • An Area • Buyers and Sellers • One Commodity • Free Competition • One Price Characteristics of a Market
  • 5. • The number and nature of sellers • The number and nature of buyers. • The nature of the product. • The conditions of entry into and exit from the market. • Economies of scale. Determinants
  • 6. • The market gives producers an incentive to produce goods that consumers want. • The market provides an incentive to acquire useful skills. • The market system involves a high degree of economic freedom. • Competition pushes businesses to be efficient: keeping costs down and production high. Advantages
  • 7. • Market economies tend to produce a skewed distribution of income (large gap between the rich and the poor). • Prices may give false or inadequate signals to producers and consumers. • A private market economy may be quite unstable (unemployment, growth). Disadvantages
  • 9. • Perfect competition refers to a market structure in which there are large number of buyers and sellers. • The sellers sell identical products. • No firm can influence the market price of the product on its own. • Sellers are price takers and not price makers. Meaning
  • 10. • Large number of buyers and sellers • Homogenous product • Independent decision making • Freedom of entry and exit of the firms • Perfect knowledge • Absence of transport cost Characteristics
  • 11. • Under perfect competition, price of the commodity is determined by the forces of market supply and market demand. • Equilibrium price of a commodity is determined at that point where the market demand is equal to the market supply. Price Determination
  • 13.
  • 14. A firm in the short run may face three situations: • It may earn super normal profits • It may earn normal profits • It may even suffer minimum losses Short Run Equilibrium of the Firm
  • 18. Long Run Equilibrium of the Firm
  • 20. •It exists when one party controls the supply of a good or service. What is a Monopoly?
  • 21. • No close substitute • Restricted entry • Price maker • Price is an endogenous variable • Price discrimination Features of a Monopoly
  • 22. • Created by patents • Created by government laws • Created by natural causes Types of Monopoly
  • 23. TR ,AR ,MR CURVE UNDER MONOPOLY
  • 24. TR ,AR ,MR CURVE UNDER MONOPOLY OUTPUT PRICE TR AR MR 1 20 20 20 20 2 18 36 18 16 3 16 48 16 12 4 14 56 14 8 5 12 60 12 4 6 10 60 10 0 7 8 56 8 -4 8 6 48 6 -8
  • 25.
  • 26. • Supernormal profits • Break-even point • Losses Short Run Equilibrium
  • 30. • When MC is falling • When MC is constant • When MC is rising Equilibrium in a Monopoly
  • 34. • Indian Railways has a monopoly in railroad transportation in India. • There is government monopoly over production of nuclear power. • Public utilities like water, public buses etc. Examples of a Monopoly
  • 35. Presented By Gaurav Goyal Price Discriminating Monopoly
  • 36. • Price discrimination is the practice of charging a different price for the same good or services. • Types of price discrimination: • First Degree • Second Degree • Third Degree Definition
  • 38. A monopsony means that there is one buyer and many sellers. Definition Characteristics Three characteristics of monopsony are: • Single buyer • No alternatives • Barriers to entry
  • 40. • Bilateral monopoly is a market structure in which there is only a single buyer and a single seller. • E.g. trade unions and management. Definition
  • 41. Presented By Mir Arsalan Qazi Monopolistic Competition
  • 42. Monopolistic Competition is a type of imperfect competition within an industry where: • All firms produce similar yet not perfectly substitutable products. • All firms are able to enter the industry if the profits are attractive. • All firms are profit maximisers. • All firms have some market power, which means none are price takers. Definition
  • 43. There are four distinct characteristics: 1. Many sellers 2. Product differentiation 3. Multiple dimensions of competition 4. Ease of entry Characteristics
  • 44. • 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. Many Sellers
  • 45. • The “many sellers” characteristic gives monopolistic competition its competitive aspect. • Product differentiation gives monopolistic competition its monopolistic aspect. • 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. Product Differentiation
  • 46. • One dimension of competition is product differentiation. • Another is competing on perceived quality. • Competitive advertising is another. • Others include service and distribution outlets. Multiple Dimensions of Competition
  • 47. • There are no significant barriers to entry. • Barriers to entry prevent competitive pressures. • Ease of entry limits long-run profit. Ease of Entry
  • 48. Product examples include: • Books • CDs • Movies • Computer Games • Restaurants • Furniture, etc. Examples
  • 49. • Short run is a time period in which at least one factor of production is fixed; long run is when all factors of production are variable. • Essentially, the difference between short and long run equilibrium is that in short run equilibrium, the firm can gain abnormal profits. Over the long run, that is impossible. Short Run and Long Run
  • 50. Monopolistic Competition v/s Perfect Competition Monopolistic Competition • Prices are generally high. • Firms have total control of the market. • Firms control the market prices. • Firms have total market share. • Difficult entry and exit points. • Barriers to entry are high. • Generally involves a single seller. • Buyers do not have a choice of where to purchase their goods or services. Perfect Competition • Prices are dictated by supply and demand. • No one firm has total market control. • Firms are all price takers. • Firms have a small market share. • Firms can enter and exit easily. • Barriers to entry are relatively low. • Has many buyers and sellers. • Consumers are able to choose where they buy their goods and services.
  • 52. • Product differentiation implies that the products are different enough that the producing firms exercise a “mini-monopoly” over their product. • Each firm produces a product that is at least slightly different from those of other firms. • Differentiation looks to make a product more attractive by contrasting its unique qualities with other competing products. • It creates a competitive advantage for the seller, as customers view these products as unique or superior. • Rather than being a price taker, each firm faces a downward-sloping demand curve. • The firms compete more on product differentiation than on price. Definition
  • 53. There are two types of product differentiation: 1. Real 2. Perceived Types of Product Differentiation
  • 54. • The brand differences are usually minor; they can be merely a difference in packaging or an advertising theme. • Differentiation is due to buyers perceiving a difference. • Causes of differentiation may be: • Functional aspects of the product or service. • How it is distributed and marketed. • Who buys it. Sources of Product Differentiation
  • 55. The major sources of product differentiation are as follows: • Differences in quality which are usually accompanied by differences in price. • Differences in functional features or design. • Ignorance of buyers regarding the essential characteristics and qualities of goods they are purchasing. • Sales promotion activities of sellers and, in particular, advertising. • Differences in availability (e.g. timing and location). Sources of Product Differentiation (contd.)
  • 57. • It is a form of imperfect competition where a few big firms compete for their homogeneous products (like cement, steel & fertilizers) or differentiated products (like automobile, computers). • There is interdependence of firms with regard to price- output decisions. • Mostly, prices are stable. • Entry of a new firm in the industry is quite difficult. • In a way, position of oligopoly lies between that of monopolistic competition and monopoly. Definition
  • 58. • A few firms • Interdependence • Selling costs • Price rigidity • Indeterminate demand curve • Group behaviour • Product • Entry Features
  • 59. If there is only 1 firm – Monopoly 2 firms only – Duopoly A few firms (2-20) – Oligopoly A large number of firms – Monopolistic Competition
  • 60. Pure Oligopoly Differentiated Oligopoly (Occurs if the product is (Occurs if the products homogeneous. Eg cement, are differentiated. Eg steel, chemicals, cooking automobiles, computers) Gas, basic metals & telecom sector) Types of Oligopoly
  • 61. • Huge capital investment • Absolute cost advantage to the existing firms • Economies of large scale production • Mergers Factors Causing Oligopoly
  • 62. Non- Collusive Oligopoly Collusive Oligopoly It implies absence of It refers to market structure explicit or implicit in which few firms cooperate understanding or agreement to establish price and output among the firms regarding levels in a particular market. price fixation, market sharing or leadership. Oligopoly
  • 63. • A cartel consists of a group of firms that have explicitly and openly agreed to work together to set the price that will be charged in a particular market. • A cartel also sets production quotas for each firm. • The quotas are determined to ensure that price is not driven below the agreed upon level. • Cartels are often international. • Cartels are illegal in the United States. Collusive Oligopoly – Cartels
  • 64. • The members should agree on price and production levels and then abide by them. • If the potential gains from cooperation are large, cartel members will take initiative and measures to solve their organizational problems. • Total demand for the good must not be price elastic. • Cartel must control nearly all the world’s supply. Conditions for Success of Cartels
  • 65. • The most widely recognized example of a cartel is the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). • OPEC is an international agreement among oil producing countries which have succeeded in raising world oil prices far above what they would have been otherwise. • Currently, the organization has twelve members, namely: • Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Venezuela. OPEC
  • 66. • Total world’s demand for oil is price inelastic. • OPEC controls a large part of world’s supply of oil. • OPEC oil has low marginal cost of producing oil. Reasons for Success of OPEC
  • 67. • OPEC is a case of successful cartel as it has been able to charge a price much above the competitive price. • In 1970s, OPEC used its monopoly power to drive prices much above the competitive levels. In the long-run, OPEC’s demand curve will be much more elastic. Reasons for Success of OPEC (contd.)
  • 68. • CIPEC (Intergovernmental Council of Copper Exporting Countries) initially constituted 4 members – Chile, Peru, Zambia and Congo. • Four more were added in 1975 – Australia, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea & Yugoslavia. • Collectively they produced less than half of world’s copper production. • It was dissolved during the 1990’s CIPEC
  • 69. • Total world’s demand for copper is price elastic. • CIPEC does not control a large part of world’s supply of copper. • CIPEC have high marginal cost of producing copper. Reasons for failure of CIPEC
  • 70. • CIPEC is a case of unsuccessful cartel as it has not been able to charge a price much above the competitive price. • CIPEC was not successful is raising price even in the short-run because total demand and competitive supply of copper is elastic. • This made CIPEC’s monopoly power small. Reasons for failure of CIPEC (contd.)
  • 71.
  • 72.
  • 73. Payoff Matrix for the Two Prisoners