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Oligopolises (реферат)

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Oligopoly is a market structure under which only a few suppliers
dominate the market and the entrance of new suppliers is either
constrained or impossible. Usually, the oligopoly market is dominated by
2-10 firms, who have a joint share of the market of 50% or more.
Automobile, steel, air transport are common examples of oligopolies. Or,
in a global sense, we could call oil producer countries oligopolies and
OPEC – a cartel. At least some firms may influence price due to their
important contribution to the total output. Every firm in the situation
of oligopoly knows that if it, or its competitors either change prices
or output, the revenues of all the participants on the market will
change. That means that firms are interdependent. For example, if
General Morors Corporation decides to raise prices on its cars, it
should consider retaliative moves by Ford, Chrysler, and other
competitors in order to calculate the ultimate changes in sales.

It is generally assumed that every firm on the market realizes
that its changes in prices or output will cause other firms to
retaliate. The kind of retaliation any supplier expects from its
competitors as a reaction to his changes in prices, output, or change of
marketing strategy is the main factor that influences its decisions.
That expected reaction also influences the balance of oligopoly markets.

Oligopolies may interact in two main ways:

Price wars, when a firm tries to increase it sales by reducing prices,
expecting that other firms will not be able to respond by doing the
same. This stops when no firm can low its prices anymore, which occurs
when P=AC and profit equals 0. Unfortunately for consumers, price wars
do not usually last long. Firms have temptations to co-operate with each
other in order to set up higher prices and to share markets in such a
way, as to avoid new price wars and their bad impact on revenues.

From the above factor results co-operation. Its closest form is a
cartel, when a union of oligopolies acts as a monopoly. Cartels are
illegal in many countries of the World.

Another reason for co-operation is to increase the entrance barriers to
prevent other firms (especially the so-called hit and run firms) to join
the market and drop prices. In that situation firms try to coordinate
their activities.

To answer this question, I first need to describe the way agreement
between oligopolies form. Let us suppose that there are 15 suppliers in
the area A who want to co-operate with each other. These firms set their
prices equal to their average costs. Each of the firms is afraid to
raise prices for the reason its competitors might not follow that move
and its profits will become negative. Let us suppose that the production
is at the competitive level Qc (pic. A), that corresponds to the
production quantity under which the demand curve crosses MC, which is a
horizontal sum of the marginal cost curves of each supplier. MC would
coincide with the demand curve if the market were perfectly competitive.
Each firm produces 1/15 of the total output Qc.

Pic. А

Pm

Pc E

MR`

MC
D

MR

Qm Qc Q`

The original balance exists at the point E.; the competitive price is
Pc. At that price each of the producers gets normal revenue. At the
price Pm, resulting from the co-operation agreement, each firm could
maximize its profits by setting Pm=MC. If each of the firms does that,
than there will be an over supply on the market, equal to QmQ units per
month. The price would fall to Pc. In order to maintain cartel price,
each of the firms should produce no more than the quota qm.

When the firms decide to co-operate, they should implement the
following policies to be able to maximize their profits.

They should make sure that there exists an entrance barrier to the
market in which they operate in order to prevent other firms from
selling a good at an old price after they increase prices for their
output. If the barriers do not exist, then the increase in prices would
attract other producers. The supply would then increase and prices would
fall below the monopoly level, co-operating firms aim to maintain.

They should decide on the general pattern of production. This could be
done by estimating market demand and by calculating marginal profit for
all levels of production. Firms need to produce so that their MC=MR (we
assume that all firms have similar production costs). The monopoly
production level would maximize revenues of each of the firms (see Pic.
A). The demand curve for the output is in the region of D. The marginal
revenue that corresponds to that curve is MR. The monopoly production
level equals to Qm, which corresponds to the point where MR crosses MC.
The monopoly price equals Pm. The current price equals Pc and the
current output – Qc. That means that the current balance is the same as
it would be under competition.

Each participant in co-operation agreement should have production
quotas. The monopoly production Qm should be divided between all members
of the treaty. For example, each firm could produce a 1/15 share of Qm
per month. If all the firms had identical cost functions it would be
equivalent to recommending them to balance their production till their
marginal costs become equal to the market marginal revenue (MR’). Until
the sum of the monthly outputs of all producers equals Qm, it is
possible to maintain the monopoly price.

Firms under co-operation agreement usually encounter problems when they
try to make a decision about monopoly prices and the level of output.
These problems are especially serious if the firms cannot agree on the
estimate of the market demand, its price elasticity; or, if they have
different production costs. Firms with higher production costs try to
insist on higher prices.

Every firm has incentives to increase its production at cartel prices.
At the same time, if everyone will increase production then the
agreement will fail because prices will decrease to their initial level.
Pic. B shows marginal and average costs of a typical producer. Before
the conclusion of co-operation agreement the firm behaves as if the
demand for its output at the price Pc was perfectly elastic. It does not
increase prices because it fears to lose all its sales to its
competitors. It produces the quantity qc. As all firms behave in the
same way, the industrial output equals Qc, which is the value that would
exist under perfect competition. Under the newly established agreed
prices the firm is allowed to produce qm units of output, corresponding
to the point at which MR equals MC of each of the firms.

Pic. В

AC
MC

Pm A F

C B

H
G

MR`

qm qc
q`

Let us suppose that the owners of any one of the firms think that the
market price will not fall if they start selling more than that
quantity. If they take Pm as price lying beyond their influence, then
their profit maximizing output will be q’, under which Pm=MC. If the
market price does not decrease, the firm can increase its profits from
PmABC to PmFGH by producing above the quota.

Just one firm could be able to increase its output without causing any
significant decrease in market prices. Let us suppose, however, that all
producers start producing above their quotas in order to maximize their
profits under “cartel” prices Pm. The industrial output would then
increase to Q’, under which Pm=MC, which will result in excess supply as
at that price the demand would be lower than the supply. Consequently,
prices will fall until the market clears, i.e. till they become equal to
Pc and the producers will come back where they have initially started.

Cartels usually try to penalize those who cheat with quotas. The main
problem however occurs when the cartel price gets set up, some firms,
aiming to maximize their profits, could earn more by cheating. If
everyone is cheating the co-operation agreement breaks down as profits
fall to 0.

Grebenschikov P.I., Leusskiy A.I., Tarasevitch L.S, Microeconomics, St.
Petersburg 1996., pp. 213- 216

Livshits A.Y. Introduction to the Market Economy, Moscow 1991,
pp.158-161

McConnell C.P., et al., Economics, Moscow 1993, pp. 125-7

Begg D., Fisher S., Dornbusch R., Economics, 5th ed., McGraw-Hill 1997,
pp. 151-51, 176, 146, 148

Lancaster K., Introduction to Modern Microeconomics, 2nd ed., N-Y 1974,
p. 200-1

Nicholson W., Microeconomic Theory, 7th ed., The Dryden Press 1998, pp.
580-4

Grebenschikov P.I., Leusskiy A.I., Tarasevitch L.S, Microeconomics, St.
Petersburg 1996., p. 213

Livshits A.Y. Introduction to the Market Economy, Moscow 1991, p.159

Livshits A.Y. Introduction to the Market Economy, Moscow 1991, p. 161

I am using the expression “cartel price” for the purpose of
simplification. What I mean by it is the high price that resulted from
the co-operation agreement between oligopolies.

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