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Market power

 

1. An investor whose buying or selling transactions are assumed to have no effect on the market.

2. A firm that can alter its rate of production and sales without significantly affecting the market price of its product.

Investopedia Says:
1. In the context of the stock market, individual investors are price-takers.

2. Suppose you sell water, which of course is supplied by millions of other places, including the sky. If you decide to set the price of a gallon of your water at $10, you will likely sell nothing because this commodity is readily available elsewhere for a much cheaper price.

Related Links:
Learn how the economic term "price taker" may separate investors from traders. Setting vs. Getting: What Is a Price-Taker?


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In economics, market power is the ability of a firm to alter the market price of a good or service. A firm with market power can raise prices without losing all customers to competitors.

When a firm has market power it faces a downward-sloping demand curve.

In perfectly competitive markets, market participants have no market power. A firm with market power has the ability to individually affect either the total quantity or the prevailing price in the market. If the demand curve is downward sloping (that is, the most common situation where price increases lead to a lower quantity demanded), then the decrease in supply as a result of the exercise of market power creates an economic deadweight loss in comparison with a situation of perfect competition. This is often viewed as socially undesirable. As a result, many countries have anti-trust or other legislation intended to limit the ability of firms to accrue market power. Such legislation often regulates mergers and sometimes introduces a judicial power to compel divestiture.

A firm usually has market power by virtue of controlling a large portion of the market. In extreme cases - monopoly and monopsony - the firm controls the entire market. However, market size alone is not the only indicator of market power. Highly concentrated markets may be contestable if there are no barriers to entry or exit, limiting the incumbent firm's ability to raise its price above competitive levels.

Market power gives firms the ability to engage in unilateral anti-competitive behavior. Some of the behaviours that firms with market power are accused of engaging in include predatory pricing, product tying, and creation of overcapacity or other barriers to entry. If no individual participant in the market has significant market power, then anti-competitive behavior can take place only through collusion, or the exercise of a group of participants' collective market power.

The Lerner index and Herfindahl index may be used to measure market power.

Contents

Oligopoly

When several firms control a significant share of market sales, the resulting market structure is called an oligopoly or oligopsony. An oligopoly may engage in collusion, either tacit or overt, and thereby exercise market power. An explicit agreement in an oligopoly to affect market price or output is called a cartel. The behavior of firms in perfect competition or monopoly can be treated as a simple optimization, but an oligopoly requires game theoretic analysis.

Monopoly power

Monopoly power is an example of market failure which occurs when one or more of the participants has the ability to influence the price or other outcomes in some general or specialized market. The most commonly discussed form of market power is that of a monopoly, but other forms such as monopsony, and more moderate versions of these two extremes, exist. Market participants that have market power are sometimes referred to as "price makers", while those without are sometimes called "price takers".

A well known example of monopolistic market power is Microsoft's market share in PC operating systems. The United States v. Microsoft case dealt with an allegation that Microsoft illegally exercised its market power by bundling its web browser with its operating system.

Source of Market Power

A monopoly can raise prices and retain customers because the monopoly has no competitors. If a customer has no other place to go to obtain the goods or services, she either pays the increased price or does without.[1] Thus the key to market power is to preclude competition through high barriers of entry. Barriers to entry that are significant sources of market power are control of scarce resources, increasing returns to scale, technological superiority and government created barriers to entry.[2] OPEC is an example of an organization that has market power due to control over scarce resources - oil. Increasing returns to scale are another important source of market power. Firms experiencing increasing returns to scale are also experiencing decreasing average total costs.[3] Firms in such industries become more profitable with size. [4]Therefore over time the industry is dominated by a few large firms. This dominance makes it difficult for start up firms to succeed.[5] Firms like power companies, cable television companies and wireless communication companies with large start up costs fall within this category. A company wishing to enter such industries must have the financial ability to spend millions of dollars before starting operations and generating any revenue. [6]Similarly established firms also have a competitive advantage over new firms. An established firm threatened by a new competitor can lower prices to drive out the competition. Microsoft is a firm that has substantial pricing or market power due to technological superiority in its design and production processes.[7] Finally government created barriers to entry can be a source of market power. A prime example are patents granted to pharmaceutical companies. These patents give the drug companies a virtual monopoly in the protected product for the term of the patent.

Measuring Market Power

Concentration ratios are the most common measures of market power. [8]The four-firm concentration ratio measures the percentage of total industry output attributable to top four industries. For monoplies the four firm rartion is 100 per cent while the ratio is zero for perfect competition.[9] Another measure of concentration is the Herfindahl=Hirschman Index which is calculated by "summing the squares of the percentage market shares of all participants in the market." [10]The HHI index for perfect competition is zero; for monopoly, 10,000. The four firm concentration domestic (U.S) ratios for cigarettes is 93%; for automobiles, 84% and for beer, 85%. [11]

Market Power and Elasticity of demand

Market power is the ability to raise price above marginal cost and earn a positive profit.[12] The degree to which a firm can raise price above marginal depends on the shape of the demand curve at the profit maximizing output.[13] That is, elasticity is the critical factor in determining market power. The relationship between market power and the Price Elasticity of Demand can be summarized by the equation:

P/MC = PED/(1 + PED)

Note that PED will be negative, so the ratio is always greater than one. The higher the P/MC ratio, the more market power the firm possesses. As PED increases in magnitude, the P/MC ratio approaches one, and market power approaches zero.[14] The equation is derived from the monopolist pricing rule:

(P - MC)/P = -1/PED

See also

References

  1. ^ If the power company raised rates the customer either pays the increase or does without power.
  2. ^ Krugman & Wells, Microeconomics 2d ed. (Worth 2009)
  3. ^ Krugman & Wells, Microeconomics 2d ed. ( Worth 2009)
  4. ^ Krugman & Wells, Microeconomics 2d ed. ( Worth 2009)
  5. ^ Krugman & Wells, Microeconomics 2d ed. ( Worth 2009)
  6. ^ Often such natural monopolies will also have the benefit of government granted monopolies.
  7. ^ Krugman & Wells, Microeconomics 2d ed. ( Worth 2009)
  8. ^ Samuelson & Nordhaus, Microeconomics, 17th ed. (McGraw-Hill 2001) at 183-84.
  9. ^ Samuelson & Nordhaus, Microeconomics, 17th ed. (McGraw-Hill 2001) at 183.
  10. ^ Samuelson & Nordhaus, Microeconomics, 17th ed. (McGraw-Hill 2001) at 184.
  11. ^ Samuelson & Nordhaus, Microeconomics, 17th ed. (McGraw-Hill 2001) at 184.
  12. ^ Perloff, J: Microeconomics Theory & Applications with Calculus page 369. Pearson 2008.
  13. ^ Perloff, J: Microeconomics Theory & Applications with Calculus page 369. Pearson 2008.
  14. ^ Perloff, J: Microeconomics Theory & Applications with Calculus Pearson 2008.

References

  • Managerial Economics and Organizational Architecture 3rd Edition, Brickley, Smith and Zimmerman, McGraw-Hill, Chapter 7

 
 

 

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