ECO100Y5 Chapter Notes - Chapter 12: Imperfect Competition, Nash Equilibrium, Monopolistic Competition

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11 Jun 2018
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CHAPTER- IMPERFECT COMPETITION AND STRATEGIC BEHAVIOUR
SUMMARY
Most firms in imperfectly competitive markets sell
differentiated products. In such industries, the firm itself must
choose its product’s characteristics.
In market structures other than perfect competition, firms set
their prices and then let demand determine sales. Changes in
market conditions are signalled to the firm by changes in the
firm’s sales.
In long-run equilibrium in monopolistic competition, goods are
produced at a point where average total costs are not at their
minimum
From society’s point of view, there is a tradeoff between
producing more brands to satisfy diverse tastes and producing
fewer brands at a lower cost per unit
Oligopolistic firms often make strategic choices; they consider
how their rivals are likely to respond to their own actions.
When game theory is applied to oligopoly, the players are
firms, their game is played in the market, their strategies are
their price or output decisions, and the payoffs are their
profits.
If a Nash equilibrium is established by any means whatsoever,
no firm has an incen- tive to depart from it by altering its own
behaviour.
There are strong incentives for oligopolists to compete with
each other through pricing, advertising, product quality, and
innovation. Consumers usually gain from such competition
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ECO100Y5 Full Course Notes
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Document Summary

Summary: most firms in imperfectly competitive markets sell differentiated products. In such industries, the firm itself must choose its product"s characteristics: in market structures other than perfect competition, firms set their prices and then let demand determine sales. Consumers usually gain from such competition: the larger the number of differentiated products that are sold by existing oligopo- lists, the smaller the market share available to a new firm that is entering with a single new product. Within this spectrum of market structure we can divide canadian industries into two broad groups: those with a large number of relatively small firms and those with a small number of relatively large firms. They can maximize their joint profits if they cooperate to produce the monopoly output. But it can take place in situations where firms in global markets are supported by national governments, as is the case for. Nat- ural barriers are most commonly due to economies of scale.

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