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Competition and Market Structures
Jump Start Chapter 7 section 11. Perfect competition is characterized by all of the following EXCEPT:
A. A smaller number of buyers and sellers B. Well informed buyers and sellersC. Identical products D. Independent buyers and sellers
2. A monopoly based on the absence of other sellers in a certain location is called A. An oligopoly B. A natural monopolyC. A geographic monopoly D. Economies of scale
3. Monopolistic competition is separated from pure competition by:A. Collusion B. Profit maximization C. Product differentiation D. Imperfect competition
4. Oligopoly is a market structure with a great deal of A. Competition among firms B. Interdependence among firmsC. Independence among firms D. Profits among firms
5. A monopoly’s prices are determined by:A. competing firms B. market equilibrium C. perfect competition D. the monopoly
Perfect Competition
• Characterized by the degree of competition among business in the same industry
• Types of Competition:• Pure Competition• Monopolistic Competition• Oligopoly• Monopoly
Market Structure
Perfect (Pure) Competition
• When a large number of buyers and sellers exchange identical products under five conditions
1) There should be a large number of buyers and sellers
2) The products should be identical 3) Buyers and sellers should act independently 4) Buyers and sellers should be well-informed 5) Buyers and sellers should be free to enter,
conduct, or get out of business
Perfect Competition
• Under a Perfect Competition – Supply and demand set the equilibrium price – Each firms sets a level of output that will
maximize its profits at that price
• Imperfect Competition – Refers to market structures that lack one or
more of the five conditions
Monopolistic Competition
• Meets all conditions of perfect competition except for identical products
• Use product differentiation – Real or imagined differences between competing
products in the same industry
• Use non-price competition – Advertising, giveaways, promotional campaigns
• Sell within a narrow price range to try to raise the price = profit maximization
Oligopoly
• A few large businesses dominate an industry
• When one business makes a move, the others usually follow– Ex: a price war…cuts in airline ticket
• Sometimes results in collusion or price-fixing which is illegal– Collusion: formal agreement to set prices– Price-Fixing: charge the same
Monopoly
• One seller of a product that has no close substitutes
– Natural Monopoly– Geographic Monopoly– Technological Monopoly– Government Monopoly
• More efficient for only one business to produce the goods– Ex: Marta, Water co.
• Government gives permission
Natural Monopoly
• No other business chooses to compete in that area– Ex: small town drugstore
Geographic Monopoly
• Results from new discoveries and inventions.
• The government grants these monopolies through the issue of patents and copyrights– Patents: inventions– Copyrights: publish
Technological Monopoly
• Involves products people need that private industry might not adequately provide
Government Monopoly
Vocabulary
1. Perfect competition 2. Non-price competition 3. Oligopoly 4. Collusion 5. Economies of scale
A. Market structure in which a few very large sellers dominate the industry
B. Market situation in which a large number of well-informed and independent buyers and sellers exchange identical products
C. The use of advertising, giveaways, and other promotional campaigns to convince buyers one product is better than another
D. A situation in which the average cost of production fails as the firm gets larger
E. A formal agreement to set prices or to otherwise behave in a cooperative manner
Jump Start Chapter 7 section 11. Perfect competition is characterized by all of the following ECCEPT:
A. A smaller number of buyers and sellers B. Well informed buyers and sellersC. Identical products D. Independent buyers and sellers
2. A monopoly based on the absence of other sellers in a certain location is called A. An oligopoly B. A natural monopolyC. A geographic monopoly D. Economies of scale
3. Monopolistic competition is separated from pure competition by:A. Collusion B. Profit maximization C. Product differentiation D. Imperfect competition
4. Oligopoly is a market structure with a great deal of A. Competition among firms B. Interdependence among firmsC. Independence among firms D. Profits among firms
5. A monopoly’s prices are determined by:A. competing firms B. market equilibrium C. perfect competition D. the monopoly
Section 2
Market Failures
Four conditions needed Adequate competition must exist Buyers and sellers must be well-informed;
opportunities in the market Resources must be free to move from one
industry to another Prices must reasonably reflect the cost of
production, including rewards
Failure occurs when these are altered
Market Failures
Jump Start Chapter 7 section 21. all of the following may lead to a market failure EXCEPT
A. resource mobility B. inadequate competition C. insufficient information D. prices do not reflect the cost of production
2. Which of the following is NOT a public good?A. Community park B. Fire departmentC. Armed forces D. Movie theater
3. What is the result of inadequate competition?A. The development of monopoly B. Artificial shortages and higher prices C. Excessive political influence by businesses D. All of the above
4. Positive and Negative externalities are called market failures becauseA. They cause imperfect competition B. They lead to higher prices C. Their cost and benefits are not reflected in the market prices paid by buyers and sellers D. They provide public goods
5. Which of the following is an example of resource mobility?A. An engineer asking for a higher wage B. An aircraft factory laying off engineers C. An engineer taking a job at a different factory D. An aircraft factory selling its products
Inadequate Competition
• Decrease b/c of mergers and acquisitions
• Inefficient resource allocation = no incentive to use resources carefully
• Reduced output = monopoly can retain high prices by limiting supply
• Large business can exert its economic power over politics
• Failures on the Demand side are harder to correct than failures on the Supply side
• Supply side:– No competition exists if a monopolist
dominates
• Demand Side– Buyers can be found but….how many want
hydroelectric dams, space shuttles, etc…
Inadequate Competition
Inadequate Information
• Consumers, businesspeople, and government official must have adequate information about market conditions
• Information– Easy to find in want ads, sale prices in
newspaper– If difficult to find = market failure
Resource Immobility
• Occurs when land, capital, labor, and entrepreneurs stay with in a market– Returns are slow – Remain unemployed
• Resources will not or cannot move to a better market – The existing market does not always function
efficiently
Externalities
• Unintended side effects • Negative
– Harm, cost, or inconveniences suffered by a third party
• Positive – Benefits received by someone who had nothing to do
with the activity that created the benefit
• Market failures– Market prices that buyers and sellers pay do not
reflect the cost and/or benefits of the action
Public Goods
• Products that everyone consumes – Use by one individual does not diminish the
satisfaction or value to others • Uncrowded highways, flood control measures,
national defense, police and fire protection
• Market is successful in satisfying individual wants and needs; fails to satisfy them on a collective basis
• Government usually has to supply them
Vocabulary Review
1. Market failure 2. Externality 3. Negative externality 4. Positive externality5. Public goods
A. An unintended side effect that either benefits or harms an uninvolved third party
B. An unwanted harm, cost, or inconvenience suffered by a third party because of actions by others
C. Products that are collectively consumed by everyone
D. A benefit received by third party that had nothing to do with the activity that generated the benefit
E. Occurs when any one of the four conditions necessary for a competitive free enterprise economy is significantly altered
Jump Start Chapter 7 section 21. all of the following may lead to a market failure EXCEPT
A. resource mobility B. inadequate competition C. insufficient information D. prices do not reflect the cost of production
2. Which of the following is NOT a public good?A. Community park B. Fire departmentC. Armed forces D. Movie theater
3. What is the result of inadequate competition?A. The development of monopoly B. Artificial shortages and higher prices C. Excessive political influence by businesses D. All of the above
4. Positive and Negative externalities are called market failures becauseA. They cause imperfect competition B. They lead to higher prices C. Their cost and benefits are not reflected in the market prices paid by buyers and
sellers D. They provide public goods
5. Which of the following is an example of resource mobility?A. An engineer asking for a higher wage B. An aircraft factory laying off engineers C. An engineer taking a job at a different factory D. An aircraft factory selling its products
The Role of Government
Jump Start Chapter 7 section 3 1. Which of the following antitrust laws was enacted first?
A. Federal Trade Commission ActB. Clayton Antitrust Act C. Sherman Antitrust Act D. Robinson-Patman Act
2. The federal law that first outlawed price discrimination is the A. Federal Trade Commission ActB. Clayton Antitrust Act C. Sherman Antitrust Act D. Robinson-Patman Act
3. Public disclosures supports competition byA. Providing buyers and sellers with information B. Revealing competitive trade secrets C. Converting private businesses into government agencies D. Concentrating information in the hands of the government
4. Which of the following is most likely be subject to government monopoly regulations?
A. A computer software company B. A large oil company C. A local restaurant D. A local cable company
5. The government takes part in the United States economy to A. Encourage competition and fair play B. Prevent monopolies and reduce cost of imperfect competition C. Regulate industries in which monopolies serve the public good D. All of the above
Antitrust Legislation
• Trust: legally formed combinations of corporations or companies
• Antitrust laws prevent or break up monopolies, preventing failures due to inadequate competition
• Competition in the market is protected by the government through antitrust legislation and the creation of the Federal Trade Commission.
• Federal Trade Commission: has the authority to stop any unfair business practices that reduce or limit competition
Federal Trade Commission
Antitrust Legislation
• 1890: Sherman Antitrust Act:1st law against monopolies
• 1914: Clayton Antitrust Act: outlawed price discrimination
• 1914: The Federal Trade Commission: empowered to issues cease and desist orders, requiring companies to stop unfair business practices
• 1936: Robinson-Patman Act: outlawed special discounts to some customers
Government Regulation
• Goal is to set the same level price and service that would exist if a monopolistic business existed under competition
• Use: tax system to regulate businesses with negative externalities – Prevents market failures
Public Disclosure
• Requires businesses to reveal information about– Products – Services to Public:
• Banks, corporations, lending institutions
• Provides information to prevent market failures – “Truth in Advertising” laws (false claims)
Indirect Disclosure
• Government support of the internet
• Availability of Gov’t documents
• Businesses post information
Modified Free Enterprise
• Government intervention to encourage – competition,– Prevent monopolies– Regulate industry – Fulfill the need for public goods
Modified Free Enterprise
• Today’s US Economy – Mixed of different market structures – Different business organization – Varying degrees of government regulation
Vocabulary Review
1. Trust 2. Clayton Antitrust Act 3. Price Discrimination 4. Robinson-Patman Act 5. Cease and desist
order
A. Strengthened previous legislation regarding price discrimination
B. Built on Sherman Antitrust Act by extending government powers against monopolies
C. An FTC ruling requiring a company to stop an unfair business practice
D. Legally formed combinations of corporations or companies
E. Practice of charging customers different prices for the same product
Jump Start Chapter 7 section 3 1. Which of the following antitrust laws was enacted first?
A. Federal Trade Commission ActB. Clayton Antitrust Act C. Sherman Antitrust Act D. Robinson-Patman Act
2. The federal law that first outlawed price discrimination is the A. Federal Trade Commission ActB. Clayton Antitrust Act C. Sherman Antitrust Act D. Robinson-Patman Act
3. Public disclosures supports competition byA. Providing buyers and sellers with information B. Revealing competitive trade secrets C. Converting private businesses into government agencies D. Concentrating information in the hands of the government
4. Which of the following is most likely be subject to government monopoly regulations?
A. A computer software company B. A large oil company C. A local restaurant D. A local cable company
5. The government takes part in the United States economy to A. Encourage competition and fair play B. Prevent monopolies and reduce cost of imperfect competition C. Regulate industries in which monopolies serve the public good D. All of the above