ADMS 1000 Lecture Notes - Lecture 18: Pete Carroll, Monopolistic Competition, Perfect Competition

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ADMS 1000 Full Course Notes
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ADMS 1000 Full Course Notes
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Document Summary

All products are similar to each other and nothing is unique. As a result, the only fact that effect consumers decision making is the price (lower = better). The market determines the price, not the company. The seller is therefore a price taker, not the price setter. Occurs when only one company produces a particular goods - absolute uniqueness. Examples: many agricultural products such as potatoes, apples, and corn are perfectly competitive. Today, however, there are few other products that exist within the conditions of pure competition since most products are slightly differentiated. In free market economies monopolistic competition is very active. A large number of companies compete with one another, offering products and services that are differentiated at least in a minor way. Differentiation strategies include branding, style or design, and advertising. Examples: coffee, shampoo, furniture, and fast-food burger restaurants. When only a few competitors dominate an industry. High barriers to entry such as capital costs.

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