ECON1131 Chapter Notes - Chapter 15: Longrun, Occupational Licensing, Profit Motive

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Softening competition: from collusion to effectively competitive markets. Economists have come to understand much of firm"s behavior in product markets. Firms try to capture customers and distance themselves from other firms so that as an attempt to soften competition they can earn and maintain profits. Cooperative/collusive behavior: collusion by two more firms in which they explicitly agree not to compete with one another. Cooperative behavior: the case of an industry cartel. Cartel: an organization of some or all of the firms in an industry established for the purpose of maximizing total profits of all the cooperating firms. Cartels and other cooperative behaviors are difficult to maintain because there is a strong incentive to cheat. Because the firms have agreed to cooperate, each is able to view the market as a pure monopolist would, rather than as one small firm among many would.

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