A2 econ session 2

Post on 11-Jan-2017

485 views 1 download

transcript

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Session 2Concentrated Markets and Government Intervention

12

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Session 2 OutlineConcentrated Markets: Key Terms

Characteristics of Concentrated Markets

Evaluating Monopoly

Examining Natural Monopoly

Analysing Oligopoly, and Exploring Game Theory

Competition Policy and Regulation

12

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Key Term Match12

Match the Concentrated Markets Key Terms to their correct definitions

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Concentration Ratios13

64.8 74 61.4

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Characteristics of Concentrated Markets

13

One dominant firm

High barriers to entry (and exit)

Price-making power

Aim to profit-maximise

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Characteristics of Concentrated Markets

13

A small number of dominant firms

Interdependence

High barriers to entry (and exit)

Collusion or price competition; differentiated or homogeneous goods

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Monopoly examples13

Local train services (regional monopoly)

Google Chrome (working monopoly)

London Underground (pure monopoly)

Rural pubs (local monopoly)

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Analysing Monopoly14

Q

P

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Evaluating Monopoly: Productive Efficiency

14

No – not producing at lowest average costPossibly – average costs may be LOWER than in a competitive market due to ECONOMIES OF SCALE

Monopoly AC

Competitive AC

Qm

Cm

Qc

Cc

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Evaluating Monopoly: Allocative Efficiency

14

No – not producing where AR = MCPossibly – there may be legal barriers to entry (eg safety regulations) which protect the consumer; may be complete market failure without the monopoly

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Evaluating Monopoly: Dynamic Efficiency

14

Possibly – supernormal profits can be used to fund R&D, and innovation to lower costs

Possibly not – many monopolies have not managed to innovate, and some had to leave the market

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Evaluating Monopoly: X-Efficiency

14

No – lack of competitive pressure means no incentive to lower costs

AC1

Possibly – tight profit margins in recession drive efficiency; shareholders reduce complacency etc

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

What is a Natural Monopoly?14

Only one firm

Large sunk costs / large

networks

Difficult to achieve

economies of scale

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Analysing Natural Monopoly14

Average Costs always falling

P

Q

Profit Max: MC = MR

Tiny supernormal profit

Highly inefficient – long way from productive efficiency

and barely any market demand met

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Analysing Natural Monopoly14

OPTIONS

P

Q

Provide a subsidy to operate at allocative efficiency

Nationalise and operate as not-for-profit

Q1

P1

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

15

Read the Royal Mail case study and identify evidence that supports the view that the Royal

Mail is a natural monopoly

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Examples of Oligopoly15

Can you think of 3 more examples of your own?

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

How do firms behave in oligopoly?

15

• Homogeneous goods• Price wars• Price leadership

Price Competition

• Homogeneous goods• Illegal, if not tacit collusion• Maximise joint profits

Collusion

• Anything other than price• Differentiated products• Brand proliferation

Non-Price Competition

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Stable Prices in Oligopoly15

Kinked Demand Curve• Price elastic demand if the price is raised –

competitors do not copy• Price inelastic demand if the price is lowered – all

competitors copy• Implies a discontinuous MR curve

Stable price• Costs can change but the profit-maximising point

does not change

P

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Stable Prices in Oligopoly15

Kinked Demand Curve

• Price elastic demand if the price is raised – competitors do not copy• Price inelastic demand if the price is lowered – all competitors copy• Implies a discontinuous MR curve

Stable price

• Costs can change but the profit-maximising point does not change

MC

ACMC1

AC1P

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Evaluating the kinked demand curve model

15

It ignores

Product differentiation

Collusion (tacit or real)

Dynamics of reaching the stable price

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Oligopoly Behaviour16

San Francisco – Hawaii flights (Nov 2015)

Supermarket Petrol Prices (Jan 2016)

Pizza Chain voucher codes (Feb 2016)

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Oligopoly Behaviour16

LIBOR rate fixing (banking, up to 2012)

Modelling agencies & model fees (Aug 2015)

Air Cargo price fixing (2000 to 2006)

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Explaining Collusion16

Why?• Maximise joint profits

How?• Restrict output / set prices high

Conditions

• Homogeneous goods• Easy to detect if a firm breaks the agreement (small number of firms, high trust)• Firms must have price-making power

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Game Theory and Collusion 16

Papa Joe’s Pizza

High Price Low Price

Dynamo’s Pizza High Price (10 , 10) (3 , 12)

Low Price (12 , 3) (6 , 6)

Work out Dynamo’s Dominant Strategy

Work out Papa Joe’s Dominant Strategy

Work out the Nash Equilibrium

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Game Theory and Collusion 17

Papa Joe’s Pizza

High Price Low Price

Dynamo’s Pizza High Price (10 , 10) (3 , 12)

Low Price (12 , 3) (6 , 6)

Is there a “better” option for each firm, other than the Nash equilibrium?

YES!Each firm charges a HIGH PRICE in order to

maximise joint profitsREQUIRES COLLUSION!

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Game Theory and Collusion 17

Papa Joe’s Pizza

High Price Low Price

Dynamo’s Pizza High Price (10 , 10) (3 , 12)

Low Price (12 , 3) (6 , 6)

Why is this option “unstable”?

Because each firm could individually earn 12 by “defecting” and charging a low

price, compared to 10 by colluding and charging a high price

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Game Theory and Collusion 17

Papa Joe’s Pizza

High Price Low Price

Dynamo’s Pizza High Price (10 , 10) (3 , 12)

Low Price (12 , 3) (6 , 6)

How can competition authorities take advantage of this instability to help tackle

collusion?

Encourage firms to defect by whistleblowing so avoiding fines

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Non-Price Competition17

Legroom, flight times, entertainment, food Quality of ingredients, ambience, seasonality

Location, range of products, other services in store Durability, battery life, weight, style

Quality of ingredients, branding, availability

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Anti-competitive practices18

Types

Collusion

Bid-Rigging

Full Line Forcing

Refusal to Supply

Predatory Pricing

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Tools of competition policy18

Price Controls (RPI – X, RIIO, RPI – X + Y)

Reducing or eliminating barriers to entry (deregulation)

Monopoly break-up / prevent mergers

Taxation / windfall taxes / fines

Changing ownership (nationalisation / privatisation)

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Regulators 19

Services that care for, and provide education for, children & young people

• School inspections – sets and monitors standards

• Funding removal for inadequate pre-school care

Firms that provide financial services to consumers (banks, mutual societies and financial advisors)

• Ban financial institutions from operating• Fine firms/individuals that break the rules

(e.g. Millburn Insurance, the boss of the London Whale)

Creating better places for people and wildlife, and supporting sustainable development

• Fines and imprisonment (e.g. Melksham Metals)

• Advice and guidance on how to meet standards

The UK’s water supply and sewerage services

• Price-capping (RPI – X + K)• Fines (e.g. Thames Water and false

flooding risk reports)• Force investment (e.g. anti-leakage)

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Reasons for regulatory failure20

Reasons

Regulatory Capture

Non-experts

Lack of Funding

Bureaucracy burdens /

costly

Too close to politicians

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

20Regulatory

Capture?

A Level Economics – Year 2 (A2) Revision Workshop

Additional Activities21

Game theory analysis

Analysis of types of monopoly, with examples

Are concentrated markets always bad? Essay practice

Evaluating the impact of freezing energy prices – essay planning

Rail fare regulation – data response