7.6 Different Market Structures
The chapter outlines the major types of market structures: perfect competition, monopolistic competition, oligopoly, and monopoly—including natural monopolies. It explains the features of each in terms of number of buyers/sellers, product differentiation, entry barriers, and availability of information. It analyzes firm performance in terms of revenue, output, profits, efficiency, and pricing. Key topics include short-run and long-run production, X-inefficiency, contestability, and market concentration ratios. The chapter concludes by evaluating competitive and collusive behaviors in oligopolies through models like kinked demand and the Prisoner’s Dilemma.
Chapter 7.6: Different Market Structures – Full Revision Notes
7.6.1 Perfect and Imperfect Competition
Perfect Competition
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Definition: A market structure with many buyers and sellers, all selling identical products.
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Characteristics:
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Many buyers and sellers, none of which can influence market price.
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Homogeneous (standardized) product.
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Perfect information for both consumers and producers.
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Freedom of entry and exit.
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Price takers: firms accept market price.
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Examples: Agricultural produce markets (wheat, eggs).
Monopolistic Competition
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Definition: A market with many sellers offering slightly differentiated products.
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Characteristics:
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Many buyers and sellers.
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Product differentiation through branding, design, or service.
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Low barriers to entry and exit.
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Firms have some control over price.
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Non-price competition (advertising, packaging).
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Examples: Restaurants, clothing brands, shampoos.
Oligopoly
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Definition: A market dominated by a few large firms.
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Characteristics:
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Few sellers with significant market share.
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Products may be homogeneous or differentiated.
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High entry and exit barriers.
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Interdependence: firms consider rivals’ actions before changing prices.
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Price rigidity: prices tend to remain stable.
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Examples: Car industry, airlines, mobile networks.
Monopoly
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Definition: A market structure with only one firm supplying a unique product with no close substitutes.
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Characteristics:
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Single seller.
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Unique product.
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Very high barriers to entry.
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Price maker: firm sets the price.
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Imperfect information.
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Types:
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Natural Monopoly: Only one firm can efficiently supply the market (e.g., water supply).
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Government Monopoly: State controls supply (e.g., postal services).
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Technological Monopoly: Based on innovation or patent.
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Geographical Monopoly: Due to location, e.g., only store in a remote village.
7.6.2 Market Structure Analysis by Key Features
|
Market Feature |
Perfect Competition |
Monopolistic Competition |
Oligopoly |
Monopoly |
|
No. of Buyers & Sellers |
Many |
Many |
Few |
One |
|
Product Differentiation |
None |
Some |
Some / None |
Unique |
|
Entry/Exit Freedom |
Free |
Relatively free |
Restricted |
Very restricted |
|
Information Availability |
Perfect |
Mostly available |
Limited |
Imperfect |
|
Price Control |
None |
Some |
Significant |
Full |
7.6.3 Barriers to Entry and Exit
Legal Barriers
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Patents, licenses, government regulations, and copyrights.
Market Barriers
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Brand loyalty, customer switching costs, product differentiation.
Cost Barriers
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High startup costs, economies of scale, sunk costs.
Physical Barriers
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Ownership of essential infrastructure, distribution networks, or exclusive locations.
7.6.4 Firm Performance in Different Market Structures
Revenue and Revenue Curves
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Total Revenue (TR) = Price × Quantity.
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Average Revenue (AR) = TR / Quantity (equal to price).
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Marginal Revenue (MR) = Change in TR from selling one more unit.
Revenue Curve Shapes
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Perfect competition: TR is linear, AR and MR are horizontal (P = AR = MR).
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Imperfect competition: AR and MR curves are downward sloping, MR < AR.
Output in Short Run and Long Run
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PC (Short Run): Firms may make normal or abnormal profits.
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PC (Long Run): Only normal profit due to entry/exit.
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MC & Oligopoly (Short Run): Firms may earn abnormal profits.
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Monopoly: Can sustain abnormal profits even in long run due to high barriers.
Profit Conditions
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Normal profit: TR = TC (includes opportunity cost).
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Abnormal profit: TR > TC.
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Loss: TR < TC.
Shutdown Price
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Short-run: Firm shuts down if P < AVC.
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Long-run: Firm exits if P < ATC.
Firm’s Supply Curve (Perfect Competition)
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In the short run, the firm’s supply curve is the portion of the MC curve above AVC.
Efficiency in Market Structures
Productive Efficiency
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Lowest cost per unit (MC = AC).
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Achieved in PC in the long run.
Allocative Efficiency
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When price = marginal cost (P = MC).
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Indicates optimal distribution of goods.
X-inefficiency
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Occurs in monopolies and oligopolies due to lack of competition.
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Higher average costs due to poor management or waste.
Dynamic Efficiency
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Efficiency over time via innovation and investment.
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Monopolies may be dynamically efficient if they reinvest profits.
Contestable Markets
Key Features
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Free entry and exit.
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Low or no sunk costs.
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Threat of new entrants keeps prices competitive.
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No long-run abnormal profits, even in monopolies or oligopolies.
Implications
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Firms behave competitively to avoid losing market share.
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Profits pushed down to normal levels (AR = ATC).
Price and Non-Price Competition
Price Competition
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Reducing prices to attract consumers.
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Can lead to price wars in oligopolies.
Non-Price Competition
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Branding, quality, service, after-sales, packaging.
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More common in monopolistic competition and oligopolies.
Collusion and Game Theory
Collusion
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Firms agree (formally or tacitly) to fix prices or output.
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Can lead to cartels (e.g., OPEC).
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Illegal in many countries.
Prisoner’s Dilemma
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Explains why collusion may not last.
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Firms have an incentive to cheat to gain higher profits.
Pay-off Matrix
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A table that shows possible profits/losses of each firm’s decisions.
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Used to illustrate the strategic interdependence in oligopoly.
7.6.5 Concentration Ratio
Definition
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The proportion of total market share held by the top 4 or 8 firms.
CR4 and CR8
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CR4: Market share of top 4 firms.
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A high ratio indicates less competition and greater market power.
Use
Common measure to identify oligopoly and assess competitiveness.
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