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Ch. 7: Market Structures

Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

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Page 1: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Ch. 7: Market Structures

Page 2: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Section 1: Perfect Competition

• Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition to exist.

Page 3: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Perfect Condition

• Perfect competition requires the following…1. Many buyers and sellers participate2. Sellers offer identical products3. Buyers and sellers are well informed4. Sellers are able to enter and exit the market

freely/easily

Page 4: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

1. Many Buyers and Sellers

• Having many producers and consumers creates choice, which brings down prices and improves products.

Page 5: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

2. Identical Products

• In perfect competition, producers are selling identical products.

• Commodity- a product that is the same regardless of who produces it (gas, corn, milk)

Page 6: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

3. Informed Buyers and Sellers

• Consumers and producers need to be informed about products and pricing to ensure competition.

• Internet has greatly advanced consumer information.

Page 7: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

4. Easy Entry and Exit

• Producers need to be able to easily enter the market for there to be many sellers.

• How easy is it to start a business?

Page 8: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Barriers to Entry

• Barrier to entry: anything that causes difficulty to businesses trying to enter a market.

• Excessive barriers to entry reduce the number of producers.– Start-up costs– Legal/certification requirements

Page 9: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Barriers to Entry

• With your partner…– Consider to barriers to entry for your business.– List all start-up costs and legal requirements that

you would need to overcome to create your business.

Page 10: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Barriers to Entry

• High start-up costs and legal requirements make it difficult to enter the market.

• America is ranked highly on the list of “ease in starting a business” list.– Limited number of legal “hoops”.

Page 11: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Section 2: Monopoly

• Monopolization eliminates competition entirely.

Page 12: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Monopoly• A monopoly is a market that only has one

supplier/producer. • Eliminates competition.

Page 13: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Monopoly examples

• With a partner, think of examples of markets with only one provider of the good/service.

Page 14: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Microsoft?

Page 15: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

How they form

• Economies of scale: average cost per unit falls as production increases.

• This makes big businesses more cost effective- enabling them to cut costs and absorb competitors.

Page 16: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

John Rockefeller: Standard Oil

• Practiced horizontal consolidation.

Page 17: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Andrew Carnegie: Carnegie Steel

• Practiced vertical consolidation.

Page 18: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Natural Monopoly

• An industry that operates most efficiently with just one provider.– Utilities: water, electric, natural gas – Roads

Page 19: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Government Monopoly

• A monopoly created by the government.– Patents– Contracts

Page 20: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Patents• A patent is a license given to an inventor that gives

them exclusive rights to sell their product.• Good for a limited period of time.

Page 21: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Funny inventions

Page 22: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition
Page 23: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Contracts and Franchising

• Government often picks firms to make contracts with.

• Company “X” is chosen to install and stock all school vending machines.

Page 24: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Section 3: Monopolistic Competition

• Most markets are neither in perfect competition, nor monopolies, but somewhere in between.

Page 25: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Monopolistic Competition

• Monopolistic competition is when many companies compete to sell products that are similar, but not identical.

Page 26: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Monopolistic Competition vs

Perfect Competition• Both have many competing firms/producers• Both have few barriers to entry• However…– Perfect Competition is a market with identical

products (commodities). – Monopolistic Competition is a market with

differentiated products (most consumer goods).

Page 27: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Nonprice Competition• Monopolistic competitors can compete on factors

other than price…– Physical characteristics – Location– Service level– Advertising, image, or status (popularity)

Page 28: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Oligopoly• Oligopoly is a market with only a few firms providing goods.• Occurs in markets with high barriers to entry.

– Think: industries that would be realistically impossible for you to enter as a producer.

Page 29: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Collusion• Collusion is when members of oligopolies agree to

set prices and production levels.• Collusion is illegal, because the effects are the same

as a monopoly- elimination of competition.

Page 30: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Cartels

• Cartels are organizations that form to coordinate prices and production.

• Also illegal, and are often associated with the black market (drug cartel)

Page 31: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Section 4: Regulation and Deregulation

• Government attempts to balance two competing interests…– Open, accessible markets for producers– Protection for consumers

Page 32: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Regulation vs. Deregulation

• Too much regulation can make it difficult for producers to enter markets (raises barriers to entry)

• Too little regulation can create monopolies and predatory business practices that end up hurting consumers.

Page 33: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Antitrust Laws

• During the Industrial Revolution, many trusts were formed.• Trusts are like cartels and result in monopolization (Standard

Oil Trust- Rockefeller) • Government eventually broke up these trusts.

Page 34: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Mergers

• Mergers are when two or more companies combine into one.

• Mergers are tightly regulated to avoid monopolization.

Page 35: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Deregulation

• During the 1970s and 1990s, Congress passed numerous laws to deregulate, citing increased inefficiencies as a result of the laws.

Page 36: Ch. 7: Market Structures. Section 1: Perfect Competition Competition balances free markets, but certain requirements need to be met for perfect competition

Credit Crisis 2007-Present

• Many cite deregulation of Wall Street investment banks as a cause of the banking collapse in 2007.

• Lending was loosely regulated, and banks were able to knowingly make faulty loans.