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Oligopoly, Collusion and Antitrust

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Title: Oligopoly, Collusion and Antitrust


1
Oligopoly, Collusion and Antitrust

2
Game Theory
  • An analytic approach that is concerned with the
    behavior of independent decision-makers whose
    fortunes are linked in an interplay of collusion,
    conflict and compromise
  • Begins with a set of decision makers or players
  • There is a set of strategies available to each
    player

3
Game Theory some definitions and assumptions
  • Outcomes for each player depend on the actions of
    all players
  • Referred to as the pattern of payoffs
  • Protocol of play describes the rules of the game
    (i.e., move order, information conditions and
    knowledge that each player has at every stage)

4
Game Theory some definitions and assumptions
  • Players are assumed to be rational with well
    defined goals
  • Modelers Objective - use the rules of the game
    to determine equilibrium

5
Game Theory some definitions and assumptions
  • Equilibrium a strategy profile consisting of a
    best strategy for each of the players of the
    game
  • Equilibrium strategies are the strategies players
    pick in trying to maximize their individual
    payoffs

6
Game theory is concerned with the following
question
  • If I believe my competitors are rational and act
    to maximize their own profits, how do I take
    their behavior into account when making my own
    profit-maximizing or utility maximizing decisions
  • Question can be difficult to answer even when
    conditions are completely symmetric

7
The Advertising Game
  • Consider a duopoly in which firms dont compete
    on price
  • p15 and Q100
  • Unit cost5 so profit10
  • The firms do compete via advertising
  • Firms can compete at a low rate at a cost of 100
    or at a high rate at a cost of 200
  • Assume advertising does not affect demand but it
    does affect market share
  • If both firms advertise in equal amounts they
    will split the market otherwise 75 share to the
    high advertiser

8
The Advertising Game
  • We can calculate the payoffs from each rate
    (15-5)50-100 400 if both are low (15-5)25-100
    if one is low and the other high .
  • Construct the payoff matrix which shows the
    payoffs to both players (firm 1, firm 2)
  • Suppose each firm chooses a strategy
    simultaneously choose hw much to advertise

9
The Advertising Game
10
The Advertising Game
  • If Firm 2 choose to high advertising then high
    advertising is optimal for Firm 1
  • If Firm 2 choose to low advertising then high
    advertising is optimal for Firm 1
  • For Firm 1 high advertising is dominant
  • If Firm 1 choose to high advertising then high
    advertising is optimal for Firm 2
  • If Firm 1 choose to low advertising then high
    advertising is optimal for Firm 2
  • For Firm2 high advertising is dominant

11
What is the Advertising Game?
12
Would it matter if one of the players went first?
13
No first mover advantage
  • If firm 1 went first and
  • advertises low, firm 2 will advertise high
  • If firm 1 advertises high, firm 2 will advertise
    high
  • What if B goes first

14
Some more terms.
  • Dominant strategy is a players best strategy
    irrespective of what the others do
  • Easy to deduce what happens in games with
    dominant strategies
  • A situation in which each player is choosing the
    best strategy available to him given the
    strategies chosen by others is called Nash
    Equilibrium
  • Dominant strategy equilibrium is a special case
    of Nash

15
Consider the next payoff matrix
16
Does A have a dominant Strategy
  • If B chooses b-1, a-2 is optimal
  • If B chooses b-2, a-1 is optimal
  • A doesnt have a dominant strategy Its optimal
    strategy depends on what B does
  • If A chooses a-1, b-1 is optimal
  • If B chooses a-2, b-1 is optimal
  • For B, b-1 is dominant

17
What should A do?
  • Put itself in Bs shoes. What decision is best
    from Bs perspective
  • A2,b1 is a Nash Equilibrium
  • Firm As optimal decision depends on what Firm B
    does

18
Alternative Rules
  • Expected value rule a-1,b-1 but a-1 is not an
    optimal response to b-1
  • Maximin for A is a 1, maximin for B is b 1,
    again not Nash

19
Nash Equilibrium
  • Each player is doing the best it can do given the
    actions of its opponents.
  • If the player has no incentive to deviate the
    strategies are stable

20
Comparison of dominant strategy and Nash
equilibrium
  • Dominant strategy equilibrium Im doing the
    best I can no matter what you do Your doing the
    best you can no matter what I do
  • Nash equilibrium Im doing the best I can do
    given what you are doing Your doing the best you
    can given what I am doing

21
Compatibility Game
  • Firm 1 is a supplier of videocassette recorders
  • Firm 2 is a supplier of videocassettes
  • Firm 1s cost of producing VHS VCR is slightly
    less than that of producing Beta
  • Firm 2s cost of producing Beta cassettes is
    slightly less
  • These firms are the sole exporters to a country
    that has no production capabilities for either
    product
  • Consumers are indifferent between the products

22
The Compatibility Game
23
What should firms do in this setting
  • If Firm 2 chooses beta, beta is optimal for Firm
    1
  • If Firm 2 chooses vhs, vhs is optimal for Firm1
  • If Firm 1 chooses beta, beta is optimal Firm 2
  • If Firm 1 chooses VHS, VHS is optimal Firm 2
  • Both firms using Beta is a Nash equilibrium
  • Both Firms using VHS is a Nash equilibrium
  • Without more information we have no way of
    knowing which equilibrium will result

24
Oligopoly
  • Essence of oligopoly is recognized
    interdependence
  • Number of firms is so few that firms have to
    worry about what other firms are doing and will
    do.
  • Many theories of oligopoly behavior but Cournot
    is still the most widely used.

25
Cournot
  • A monopolist can achieve the same profit
    maximizing outcome by choosing the most
    profitable price or the most profitable quantity.
  • With oligopoly it makes a difference whether
    firms engage in price or output competition

26
Quantity Competition
  • Consider a duopoly facing a linear market demand
    curve
  • Goods produced are homogeneous
  • Outputs are chosen simultaneously
  • Price is determined by
  • P100 Q
  • P100 (q1q2)
  • Assume MC 0

27
Collusive Solution
  • Assume two firms decide to work together as a
    monopolist
  • Max profit MRMC0
  • MR 100 2Q 0
  • 100 2 Q
  • Q50
  • Implies P 50
  • Profit PQ50502500
  • Collusive solution if firms split the profit -
    1250

28
Competitive Solution
  • MCP0
  • Here the supply curve is the horizontal axis
  • P100-Q implies Q100
  • Profit will be 0

29
Cournot Solution
  • Each firm is aware that increasing output will
    reduce t he market price P
  • In making its own output decision, each firm
    assumes its competitors output is fixed each
    chooses the highest payoff given the decision of
    the other

30
Cournot
  • What is the rationale?
  • For any output q2 there is a profit maximizing q1
  • Firm 1 acts as a monopolist over the remaining
    demand
  • Plot firm 1s optimal q as a function of q2 and a
    corresponding one for firm 2

31
Reaction Curves
q2
Intersection defines Cournot equilibrium which
is also Nash
rc2
rc1
q1
32
Reaction Curves
  • Firm 1s producing q1
  • Demand for Firm 2
  • P (100-q1) q2
  • Since q1 is regarded as a constant
  • MR (100-q1) 2q2
  • RC2 can be found by setting MC2MR2

33
Reaction Curves
  • Firm 2s Demand
  • q2 50 q1/2
  • Analogously, firm 1s Demand is
  • q1 50 q2/2
  • Rearranging terms and by substitution
  • -2q2 100 50 q2/2
  • -2q2 1/2 q2 -50
  • -3/2q2 -50 implies q233 1/3
  • q1 50 33 1/3 ½ 33 1/3

34
Alternative Story Stackleberg Model
  • Here Firm 1 sets q1 first then firm2 sets q2
  • look at last decision first
  • How do we find optimal q2 given q1
  • Reaction Function
  • P 100 (50-q1/2)-q1
  • P 50 - q1/2
  • MR 50 q1 implies q1 50
  • q2 50 q1/2 implies q2 25

35
Alternative Story Stackleberg Model
  • P 100 q2 - q1 100 25 50 25
  • Q 75
  • Firm 1 profit 25 50 1250
  • Firm 2 profit 25 25 625
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