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Market Structures

Subject: Economics
Topic: 4
Cambridge Code: 0455 / 2281


Perfect Competition

Perfectly competitive market - Many firms, identical products, free entry

Characteristics

  • Many buyers and sellers: No individual firm controls price
  • Homogeneous product: Identical goods (no differentiation)
  • Perfect information: Buyers and sellers informed
  • Firms are price takers: Accept market price
  • Free entry and exit: No barriers to start/leave
  • Normal profit long-run: Just covers opportunity cost

Demand Curve

Perfectly elastic (horizontal):

  • Firm can sell any amount at market price
  • Any price increase = zero sales
  • AR = MR = Price

Equilibrium

Short run:

  • Firm produces where MR = MC
  • May make supernormal profit
  • May make loss

Long run:

  • Free entry eliminates supernormal profit
  • Exit eliminates losses
  • P = AC = MC (normal profit)
  • Productively and allocatively efficient

Real Examples

  • Agricultural products (wheat, corn)
  • Foreign exchange markets
  • Perfect competition rare in reality

Monopoly

Monopoly - One firm, unique product, high barriers to entry

Characteristics

  • One seller: Controls entire market supply
  • Unique product: No close substitutes
  • Barriers to entry: Prevents competition
  • Price maker: Sets quantity and price
  • Supernormal profit: Long-run possible
  • Downward-sloping demand: AR > MR

Barriers to Entry

Natural barriers:

  • Large capital requirements
  • Economies of scale (only room for one)
  • Control of essential resources

Created barriers:

  • Patents and intellectual property
  • Government licenses
  • Exclusive contracts
  • Predatory practices

Demand and Revenue

Firm faces whole market demand:

  • Downward sloping
  • To sell more, must lower price
  • MR < AR (Price) due to quantity effect
  • MR falls faster than AC

Equilibrium

Profit maximization:

  • Produce where MR = MC
  • Charge price from demand curve at that quantity
  • Makes supernormal profit (can persist)
  • Productively? At MR=MC, but AC not minimum (excessive AC)
  • Allocatively inefficient (P > MC)

Problem with Monopoly

  • Underproduction: Produces less than competitive market
  • Higher prices: Higher than competitive price
  • Supernormal profit: Allocative inefficiency
  • X-inefficiency: Lack of competition reduces efficiency
  • No incentive to innovate: Complacent

Oligopoly

Oligopoly - Few large firms, differentiated products, some barriers

Characteristics

  • Few large firms: Each has market power
  • High market concentration: Dominated by few
  • Differentiated products: Brand loyalty important
  • Interdependence: Firms' decisions affect each other
  • Barriers to entry: Capital requirements
  • Variable profit: Can be supernormal

Behavior

Pricing strategies:

  • Sensitive to rivals' prices
  • Price wars possible but rare (damaging)
  • Often stable prices
  • Non-price competition important

Non-price competition:

  • Advertising
  • Product differentiation
  • Brand loyalty
  • Design and quality
  • Customer service

Examples

  • Car manufacturers (5-10 major firms)
  • Oil companies
  • Carbonated soft drinks
  • Airlines
  • Supermarkets

Monopolistic Competition

Monopolistic competition - Many firms, differentiated products, free entry

Characteristics

  • Many firms: But fewer than perfect competition
  • Differentiated products: Brand loyalty and switching costs
  • Free entry and exit: Easy to enter
  • Some market power: Can charge above MC
  • Non-price competition: Heavy advertising
  • Normal profit long-run: Long-run equilibrium

Equilibrium

Short run:

  • Produce where MR = MC
  • Charge price from demand curve
  • May make supernormal profit

Long run:

  • Free entry erodes profit
  • PC gets lower demand and higher costs
  • Eventually P = AC (normal profit)
  • Not productivelyor allocatively efficient
  • Excess capacity exists

Examples

  • Restaurants
  • Fashion retailers
  • Coffee shops
  • Software apps
  • Medical practices

Comparison of Market Structures

FeaturePerfectMonopolisticOligopolyMonopoly
# FirmsManyManyFewOne
ProductIdenticalDifferentiatedDifferentiatedUnique
EntryFreeFreeRestrictedBlocked
PriceTakerSetterInterdependentSetter
LR ProfitNormalNormalSupernormalSupernormal
EfficiencyBothNeitherPoorNeither
AR = MRYesNoNoNo
AdsNoneHeavyHeavyNone

Price Discrimination

Price discrimination - Charging different prices for same product

Requirements

  1. Market power: Ability to set price
  2. Different price elasticities: Customer groups differ
  3. Prevent resale: Customers can't resell (services often)

Types

1st degree: Each customer pays maximum willing 2nd degree: Volume discounts (more units cheaper) 3rd degree: Different market segments different prices

Examples

  • Cinema tickets (student discounts)
  • Air fares (business vs leisure)
  • Version software (full vs lite)
  • Pharmaceuticals (different countries)

Effect

  • Increases total profit
  • Increases consumer surplus loss
  • Can increase output (allocative efficiency improves)

Key Points

  1. Perfect competition: Many firms, efficient, but rare
  2. Monopoly: One firm, inefficient, high barriers
  3. Oligopoly: Few firms, interdependent, realistic competitive
  4. Monopolistic competition: Many firms, differentiated, normal profit long-run
  5. Market power: Ability to set price (not price taker)
  6. Price discrimination: Different prices, same product
  7. Efficiency varies by market structure
  8. Real markets usually oligopolistic or monopolistically competitive

Practice Questions

  1. Identify market structure from description
  2. Draw demand and revenue for each structure
  3. Compare profit between structures
  4. Analyze barriers to entry
  5. Predict price discrimination
  6. Compare efficiency between structures
  7. Analyze non-price competition

Revision Tips

  • Know characteristics of each structure
  • Understand differences clearly
  • Know AR and MR relationships
  • Practice drawing demand curves
  • Know profit maximization for each
  • Understand efficiency implications
  • Practice real-world examples