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SYLLABUS – UNIT 05 - HNDA
Market Structures and pricing 08 hrs
 5.1 Distinguish among four major categories of
market structures
 5.2 Assumption of perfect competition and short – run
equilibrium of the firm
 5.3 Explain short-run equilibrium of the industry and
the firm.
 5.4 Assumption of monopoly and its demand and
revenue.
 5.5 Explain the concept of price discrimination.
GROUP MEMBERS
 T. Mithusha
 K.Mathusika
 R.Rajeevani
 Srithar
 Aslam
 Sugirjan
 Thushan
 Mithushan
 Krishneetha
 T.supajini
Introduction to Market
 The term market is derived from the latin word “marcatus”which means
merchandise or trade.
 Market is a place where buyers and sellers meet together for the
exchange of title of goods.
 It is therefore understood as those characteristic of a market that
influence the behavior and result of the firms working in that market
Things to be Considered
 Number and size of sellers and buyers
 Nature of the product
 Condition of entry and exit
 Transperency of information
 Pricing
 advertising
Types of Market Structures
 Perfect competition
 Monopolistic competition
 Oligopoly competition
 Monopoly competition
Perfect Competition
 A purely competitive market with added feature that buyers and
sellers have complete and continuous knowledge of all bids and
offers in the market and mobility to take immediate action on this
basis of that knowledge
 Features:
 Free entry and exit to industry
 Homogenous product – identical so no consumer preference
 Large number of buyers and sellers – no individual seller can
influence price
 Sellers are price takers – have to accept the market price
 Perfect information available to buyers and sellers
Advantages of Perfect Competition
 High degree of competition helps allocate resources to most efficient
use
 Price = marginal costs
 Normal profit made in the long run
 Firms operate at maximum efficiency
 Consumers benefit
 Examples:
 Financial markets – stock exchange, currency markets, bond
markets
 Agriculture
Demand and Supply Curve in Perfect
Market
Demand Curve Supply Curve
Market supply
curve
Demand and Supply Curve in Perfect Firm
Demand Curve Supply Curve
D=AR=MR=P
S=MC
Constant price under Perfect competition
AR and MR in Perfect Firm
Price Quantit
y
TR AR MR
20 1 20 20
20 2 40 20 20
20 3 60 20 20
20 4 80 20 20
20 5 100 20 20
TR=P×Q
AR=TR/Q
MR=∆TR/ ∆Q
P=AR=MR
p
Q
20
1 2 3 4 5
Short run Equlibrium Point in Perfect
Market
 Conditions,
 At the where MC=MR, the firm attains equlibrium
 It’s MC curve cut it’s MR curve from below.
 In the short period the attains equlibrium,
1. Abnormal profit
2. Normal profit
3. loss
Abnormal Profit
The profit is measured by the difference in AC and AR and
competing the rectangle. (TR>TC) / (AR>AC)
 E=Equlibrium In Firm
(MC=MR)
 OP- Average revenue
 OQ - productin quantity
 OPEQ – total revenue
 OP1 – average cost
 OP1AQ – total cost
 P1PEA – abnormal
profit
P1
P
=D
Normal profit
 In short run, some firms may be making normal profits where total
revenue equals total cost. (Break- even output)
 In the diagram below, At equilibrium ,the firm has same costs such that
the market price is equal to the average cost curve.
 At the profit maximising level of output, the firm is making an normal
profits .
P
 E – equlibrium in firm
(MC=MR)
 OP – AR or AC
 OQ1 – production
quanity
 OPEQ1 – TR or TC
loss
 The firm shown has high costs such that the market price is below the
average cost curve.
 At the profit maximising level of output, the firm is making an economic
loss. (AR<AC) / (TR<TC)
 E - E – equlibrium in firm
(MC=MR)
 OP – AR
 OQ – production quanity
 OPEQ – TR
 OP1 – AC
 OP1AQ – TC
 PP1AE - loss
P1
P
Equlibrium Price and Output Under perfect
market in long run
 In the long run the firm attains equilibrium
when long run AC and MC are equal to
the long run AR and MR.
 The firm and the industry enjoy only
normal profit.
 The reason is that sufficient time
available for adjusting the supply
according to the supply.
 The condition is AC=MC=AR=AC
 In the long period all costs are variable
so supply will be increased only when
price is equal to AC
 In the the long run normal price is equal
to minimum AC of the industry
Monopolistic Competition
 It may be defined as a combination of both perfect competition and
monopoly.
 A market structure with a large number of sellers some product
differentiation and fairly easy enter and exit.
 It refers to that market situation
 In which large number of producers produce goods which are
close substitutes of each other
 These goods are similar, but not exactly identical or homogenous.
 But their use is the same
 Thus product differentiation is the hall mark of monolistic
Example: variety of soaps
medical stores
retail general stores
hair dressers
characteristic of Monopolistic Competition
 Many buyers and sellers
 Products differentiated
 Free entry and exit of firm
 As high advertising cost
 Non price competition
 consumer’s attachment
 Firm is price maker not taker
Examples : restaurants
professions – solicitors
building firms – plasterers
plumbers
Demand Curve in Monopolistic Competition Firm
D
ED>1
Price determination under monopolistic under
monopolistic competition
 The monopolistic price detremination can be studied under two different
time periods,
1. Short period
2. Long period
SHORT RUN
 The price determination under the short run is same as that of monopoly
1. Abnormal profit
2. Normal profit
3. Loss profit
LONG RUN
 As we known that long run is a time when firm can change all factors of
production.
 In this period, each firm will produce up to that limit where LMR=LMC.
 In long run firms earn normal profits only.
 But in practical life a monopolistic firm may earn abnormal profits
 Because other firms are not in a position to bring out closely related
products
 Nor can new firms enter the group during short period
No firm earns abnormal profits in the long run
because of following reasons
 If firm earns abnormal profits, then several new firms will enter the
market as entry is free.
 In order to create demand for their products, the new firms will fix the
price at a low level.
 Thus in long run monopolistic firm earns only normal profits.
 The price determinination is same as that of monopoly i-e the case of
normal profit
Oligopoly
 It is a imperfect market where there are a few seller in the market.
 They are producing identical products.
 Products are close but not perfect substitutes of each other.
 Examples: steel
cement
soft drinks
tyres
 Because of their interdepence they face a situation:
 In which the optimal decision of one firm depends on what other
firms decide to do
Features of oligopoly
 A few sellers
 Lack of uniformity(size of the firm)
 Homogenous or differentiated product
 Huge expenditure
 Price rigidity
 Objective of the firm may be non profit
 High degree of interdependence between firms
KINKED DEMAND CURVE
Price
Quantity
D = elastic
D = Inelastic
£5
100
Kinked D Curve
Monopoly
 A market structure in which there is only a single seller, no acceptable
substitutes are available for the product offered for sale and no entry into
the market is possible.
 Monopoly is a market structure characterized by a single supplier and
high barriers to entry.
 It is composed,
MONO + POLY
single + seller
Example: Railway
Tobacco company
Electricity
Water supply
Characteristic of Monopoly
 There is one seller in the market
 Large number of buyers
 There are no close substitutes
 High barriers to entry
 Firm controls price OR output/supply
 Abnormal profits in long run
 Consumer choice limited
Advantages and Disadvantages of Monopoly:
 Advantages:
 May be appropriate if natural monopoly
 Encourages R&D
 Encourages innovation
 Development of some products not likely without some guarantee of
monopoly in production
 Economies of scale can be gained – consumer may benefit
 Disadvantages:
 Exploitation of consumer – higher prices
 Potential for supply to be limited - less choice
 Potential for inefficiency –
X-inefficiency – complacency over controls on costs
Demand Curve in MonopolyFirm
D
Equlibrium Price and Output Under Monopoly
 Profit – maximizing case:
 A firm in the short run earn maximum profit when it meets the following
condition
 MR=MC and MC curve cuts MR from below
 Average revenue is greaterthan average total cost
 In the short period the attains equlibrium,
1. Abnormal profit
2. Normal profit
3. Loss
 It is always posibile for a monopolist to earn super normal profit
 In the long run the firm has time to adjust his plant size or to use existing
plants so as to maximize profit
Abnormal profit
 In the graph the firm in equlibrium at output OQs.
 OA or QB is the price.
 CQ is the average total cost.
 The grey area ABCD represents monopoly profit
 Any other combination of price & output will yield less than maximum
possible profit.
Normal profit
 In the graph R is the point of equilibrium where MR=MC.
 OQ is the equilibrium output.
 The firm is earning normal profits in equilibrium situation as,
 At equilibrium output AR=AC
 And normal profits are included in short run average cost.
loss
 In the graph the firm in eqilibrium at
output OQ
 Where MR=MC
 OP or QB is the price
 QC is the average total cost
 The grey area PDCB represents loss
area
 But here the loss is minimum because
AR=AVC
 Thus loss is limited to fixed cost.
 The monopolist will suffer this loss
even if he closes down the
production.
 If the price of monopolist falls below
the QB he would prefer to close down
the production in short term period.
Long term
 In the period all factors of the production are variable
 Monopolist firm in the long run also is in equilibrium at a point where
MR=MC
 But in long run, a monopolist firm earns only profits
 It is in a position to earn supernormal profits
 The long period equilibirium of a monopolist firm is same as that of
during short run (abnormal profit)
SUMMERISING
Market structures - HNDA Assignment

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Market structures - HNDA Assignment

  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3. SYLLABUS – UNIT 05 - HNDA Market Structures and pricing 08 hrs  5.1 Distinguish among four major categories of market structures  5.2 Assumption of perfect competition and short – run equilibrium of the firm  5.3 Explain short-run equilibrium of the industry and the firm.  5.4 Assumption of monopoly and its demand and revenue.  5.5 Explain the concept of price discrimination.
  • 4. GROUP MEMBERS  T. Mithusha  K.Mathusika  R.Rajeevani  Srithar  Aslam  Sugirjan  Thushan  Mithushan  Krishneetha  T.supajini
  • 5. Introduction to Market  The term market is derived from the latin word “marcatus”which means merchandise or trade.  Market is a place where buyers and sellers meet together for the exchange of title of goods.  It is therefore understood as those characteristic of a market that influence the behavior and result of the firms working in that market
  • 6. Things to be Considered  Number and size of sellers and buyers  Nature of the product  Condition of entry and exit  Transperency of information  Pricing  advertising
  • 7. Types of Market Structures  Perfect competition  Monopolistic competition  Oligopoly competition  Monopoly competition
  • 8.
  • 9. Perfect Competition  A purely competitive market with added feature that buyers and sellers have complete and continuous knowledge of all bids and offers in the market and mobility to take immediate action on this basis of that knowledge  Features:  Free entry and exit to industry  Homogenous product – identical so no consumer preference  Large number of buyers and sellers – no individual seller can influence price  Sellers are price takers – have to accept the market price  Perfect information available to buyers and sellers
  • 10. Advantages of Perfect Competition  High degree of competition helps allocate resources to most efficient use  Price = marginal costs  Normal profit made in the long run  Firms operate at maximum efficiency  Consumers benefit  Examples:  Financial markets – stock exchange, currency markets, bond markets  Agriculture
  • 11. Demand and Supply Curve in Perfect Market Demand Curve Supply Curve Market supply curve
  • 12. Demand and Supply Curve in Perfect Firm Demand Curve Supply Curve D=AR=MR=P S=MC
  • 13. Constant price under Perfect competition
  • 14. AR and MR in Perfect Firm Price Quantit y TR AR MR 20 1 20 20 20 2 40 20 20 20 3 60 20 20 20 4 80 20 20 20 5 100 20 20 TR=P×Q AR=TR/Q MR=∆TR/ ∆Q P=AR=MR p Q 20 1 2 3 4 5
  • 15. Short run Equlibrium Point in Perfect Market  Conditions,  At the where MC=MR, the firm attains equlibrium  It’s MC curve cut it’s MR curve from below.  In the short period the attains equlibrium, 1. Abnormal profit 2. Normal profit 3. loss
  • 16. Abnormal Profit The profit is measured by the difference in AC and AR and competing the rectangle. (TR>TC) / (AR>AC)  E=Equlibrium In Firm (MC=MR)  OP- Average revenue  OQ - productin quantity  OPEQ – total revenue  OP1 – average cost  OP1AQ – total cost  P1PEA – abnormal profit P1 P =D
  • 17. Normal profit  In short run, some firms may be making normal profits where total revenue equals total cost. (Break- even output)  In the diagram below, At equilibrium ,the firm has same costs such that the market price is equal to the average cost curve.  At the profit maximising level of output, the firm is making an normal profits . P  E – equlibrium in firm (MC=MR)  OP – AR or AC  OQ1 – production quanity  OPEQ1 – TR or TC
  • 18. loss  The firm shown has high costs such that the market price is below the average cost curve.  At the profit maximising level of output, the firm is making an economic loss. (AR<AC) / (TR<TC)  E - E – equlibrium in firm (MC=MR)  OP – AR  OQ – production quanity  OPEQ – TR  OP1 – AC  OP1AQ – TC  PP1AE - loss P1 P
  • 19. Equlibrium Price and Output Under perfect market in long run  In the long run the firm attains equilibrium when long run AC and MC are equal to the long run AR and MR.  The firm and the industry enjoy only normal profit.  The reason is that sufficient time available for adjusting the supply according to the supply.  The condition is AC=MC=AR=AC  In the long period all costs are variable so supply will be increased only when price is equal to AC  In the the long run normal price is equal to minimum AC of the industry
  • 20.
  • 21. Monopolistic Competition  It may be defined as a combination of both perfect competition and monopoly.  A market structure with a large number of sellers some product differentiation and fairly easy enter and exit.  It refers to that market situation  In which large number of producers produce goods which are close substitutes of each other  These goods are similar, but not exactly identical or homogenous.  But their use is the same  Thus product differentiation is the hall mark of monolistic Example: variety of soaps medical stores retail general stores hair dressers
  • 22. characteristic of Monopolistic Competition  Many buyers and sellers  Products differentiated  Free entry and exit of firm  As high advertising cost  Non price competition  consumer’s attachment  Firm is price maker not taker Examples : restaurants professions – solicitors building firms – plasterers plumbers
  • 23. Demand Curve in Monopolistic Competition Firm D ED>1
  • 24. Price determination under monopolistic under monopolistic competition  The monopolistic price detremination can be studied under two different time periods, 1. Short period 2. Long period SHORT RUN  The price determination under the short run is same as that of monopoly 1. Abnormal profit 2. Normal profit 3. Loss profit
  • 25. LONG RUN  As we known that long run is a time when firm can change all factors of production.  In this period, each firm will produce up to that limit where LMR=LMC.  In long run firms earn normal profits only.  But in practical life a monopolistic firm may earn abnormal profits  Because other firms are not in a position to bring out closely related products  Nor can new firms enter the group during short period
  • 26. No firm earns abnormal profits in the long run because of following reasons  If firm earns abnormal profits, then several new firms will enter the market as entry is free.  In order to create demand for their products, the new firms will fix the price at a low level.  Thus in long run monopolistic firm earns only normal profits.  The price determinination is same as that of monopoly i-e the case of normal profit
  • 27.
  • 28. Oligopoly  It is a imperfect market where there are a few seller in the market.  They are producing identical products.  Products are close but not perfect substitutes of each other.  Examples: steel cement soft drinks tyres  Because of their interdepence they face a situation:  In which the optimal decision of one firm depends on what other firms decide to do
  • 29. Features of oligopoly  A few sellers  Lack of uniformity(size of the firm)  Homogenous or differentiated product  Huge expenditure  Price rigidity  Objective of the firm may be non profit  High degree of interdependence between firms
  • 30. KINKED DEMAND CURVE Price Quantity D = elastic D = Inelastic £5 100 Kinked D Curve
  • 31.
  • 32. Monopoly  A market structure in which there is only a single seller, no acceptable substitutes are available for the product offered for sale and no entry into the market is possible.  Monopoly is a market structure characterized by a single supplier and high barriers to entry.  It is composed, MONO + POLY single + seller Example: Railway Tobacco company Electricity Water supply
  • 33. Characteristic of Monopoly  There is one seller in the market  Large number of buyers  There are no close substitutes  High barriers to entry  Firm controls price OR output/supply  Abnormal profits in long run  Consumer choice limited
  • 34. Advantages and Disadvantages of Monopoly:  Advantages:  May be appropriate if natural monopoly  Encourages R&D  Encourages innovation  Development of some products not likely without some guarantee of monopoly in production  Economies of scale can be gained – consumer may benefit  Disadvantages:  Exploitation of consumer – higher prices  Potential for supply to be limited - less choice  Potential for inefficiency – X-inefficiency – complacency over controls on costs
  • 35. Demand Curve in MonopolyFirm D
  • 36. Equlibrium Price and Output Under Monopoly  Profit – maximizing case:  A firm in the short run earn maximum profit when it meets the following condition  MR=MC and MC curve cuts MR from below  Average revenue is greaterthan average total cost  In the short period the attains equlibrium, 1. Abnormal profit 2. Normal profit 3. Loss  It is always posibile for a monopolist to earn super normal profit  In the long run the firm has time to adjust his plant size or to use existing plants so as to maximize profit
  • 37. Abnormal profit  In the graph the firm in equlibrium at output OQs.  OA or QB is the price.  CQ is the average total cost.  The grey area ABCD represents monopoly profit  Any other combination of price & output will yield less than maximum possible profit.
  • 38. Normal profit  In the graph R is the point of equilibrium where MR=MC.  OQ is the equilibrium output.  The firm is earning normal profits in equilibrium situation as,  At equilibrium output AR=AC  And normal profits are included in short run average cost.
  • 39. loss  In the graph the firm in eqilibrium at output OQ  Where MR=MC  OP or QB is the price  QC is the average total cost  The grey area PDCB represents loss area  But here the loss is minimum because AR=AVC  Thus loss is limited to fixed cost.  The monopolist will suffer this loss even if he closes down the production.  If the price of monopolist falls below the QB he would prefer to close down the production in short term period.
  • 40. Long term  In the period all factors of the production are variable  Monopolist firm in the long run also is in equilibrium at a point where MR=MC  But in long run, a monopolist firm earns only profits  It is in a position to earn supernormal profits  The long period equilibirium of a monopolist firm is same as that of during short run (abnormal profit)