ECONOMICS 3200M Lecture 12 February 27, 2006 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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ECONOMICS 3200M Lecture 12 February 27, 2006

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Firm 1 (leader) chooses level of K (capital investment, capacity) K1 ... Q100. Consumer surplus. Total expenditures. 10. Price Discrimination ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ECONOMICS 3200M Lecture 12 February 27, 2006


1
ECONOMICS 3200MLecture 12February 27, 2006
2
Strategic Behaviour
  • Commitment and entry
  • Assumptions
  • Duopoly firm 1 (incumbent), firm 2 (potential
    entrant)
  • Firm 1 (leader) chooses level of K (capital
    investment, capacity) K1
  • Firm 2 (follower) observes K1 and selects its
    level of K K2
  • ?i Ki (1 Ki Kj), K levels are strategic
    substitutes
  • No fixed cost of entry
  • 2-period Stackelberg game
  • Types of K
  • Physical capital
  • Learning-by-doing (experience)
  • Developing clientele advertising, switching
    costs decrease demand for entrant
  • Setting up network of exclusive franchises
    increase entrants distribution costs
  • Product development choosing strategic
    locations in geographic/product space

3
Strategic Behaviour
  • Commitment and entry
  • If there are fixed/sunk costs for entry f ,
    profit function for firm 2
  • ?2 K2 (1 K1 K2) f if K2 gt 0
  • ?2 0 if K2 0
  • Truncated reaction function for firm 2 more
    likely that entry can be deterred
  • 3 possible solutions 2 deter entry (S1 and S2),
    one accommodates entry (S3)
  • The larger the fixed cost, the less likely that
    entry will be accommodated (case S3)

4
K2
R2 fixed costs
N
S3
S2
S1
K1
K1
K1
M2
M1
5
Bayesian Analysis
  • Incomplete information regarding state of demand,
    cost functions of rivals, strategic decisions of
    rivals
  • Market interaction a game of asymmetric and
    incomplete information
  • Firms history matters
  • Conveys information to rivals
  • Affects expectations of rivals
  • Multi-period oligopolistic interactions
  • Firms behaviour reveals information
  • Rational for firm to manipulate rivals
    information and expectations

6
Bayesian Analysis
  • Bi , i 1 N (all possible events)
  • A particular outcome
  • P(Bi) a priori probabilities (expectations)
  • Revise a priori probabilities after observing
    particular outcome
  • P(BR?A) P(BR)P(A? BR)/?i1N P(Bi)P(A?
    Bi)
  • Example
  • N 2
  • P(B1) 0.67 P(A? B1) 0.75 P(A? B2) 0.50
  • A occurs
  • P(B1?A) P(B1)P(A? B1)/?i1,2 P(Bi)P(A?
    Bi) 0.670.75/(0.670.75) (0.330.5)
    0.75

7
Price Discrimination
  • Sale of identical good/service at different
    prices to different buyers or at different prices
    to same buyer
  • Alternative form of price discrimination
  • Different bundles of features/characteristics and
    different prices
  • Hotels suites, singles, doubles, floor level,
    other amenities (access to lounge, health clubs
    breakfast included priority check-in)
  • First degree price discrimination perfect price
    discrimination
  • Each unit sold at a different price extract all
    consumer surplus
  • Difference between maximum price consumer willing
    to pay for product and actual price paid at each
    price for a particular product, each person that
    purchases the product gains a different value of
    consumer surplus different willingness to pay
    for a product
  • Potential for market segmentation and price
    discrimination ? companies can exploit
    differences among consumers to increase their
    revenues and profits
  • Auctions

8
P
P1
P2
P3
Q
1
2
3
9
P
Consumer surplus
P100
Total expenditures
Q
Q100
10
Price Discrimination
  • Third degree price discrimination
  • Different prices to different groups of buyers
    (independent demands, interdependent cost model
    for monopolist)
  • Prices differ on basis of signals related to
    perceived consumers preferences (age, location,
    occupation, income, ethnicity,etc.)
  • Consumers on different demand curves as compared
    to first degree where consumers are at different
    positions on the same demand curve
  • Movie theaters special rates for seniors,
    children
  • Frequent user programs
  • Wealth management
  • Second degree
  • Two-part tariffs fixed price (entry/membership
    fee) usage fee
  • Preceding graph fixed price consumer surplus,
    and usage fee P100
  • Membership in golf clubs
  • Taxis
  • Utilities

11
Price Discrimination
  • Conditions for price discrimination
  • Firm must have some degree of market power
  • Firm must be able to infer each consumers
    willingness to pay
  • Firm must be able to prevent arbitrage

12
Price Discrimination
  • Arbitrage
  • If transactions costs between consumers small
    relative to price of product, consumers who are
    able to pay low price buy extra quantities and
    re-sell to consumers who are willing to pay and
    are charged higher prices
  • Scalping opportunity cost of time
  • International price discrimination (dumping) and
    possibility for arbitrage transactions costs
    include transportation costs, tariffs, reputation
  • Limit arbitrage
  • Services cannot be resold entertainment
    services, telecom services exceptions
  • Warranties valid only for original buyers
  • Different bundles/prices
  • Signals
  • Vertical integration

13
Price Discrimination
  • Vertical integration example to prevent arbitrage
  • Monopolist produces good used as input by two
    separate industries
  • Elasticities of demand for input in 2 industries
    ?1 gt ?2
  • P1 lt P2
  • To prevent arbitrage
  • Monopolist buys firm in industry 1 and sells only
    to this firm in this industry and sells to all
    firms in industry 2 at P2
  • Other firms in industry 1 will be driven out of
    business

14
Price Discrimination
  • Third degree price discrimination
  • Aggregate demand can be divided into N distinct
    segments on basis of exogenous information
    (signals reflecting consumer preferences, market
    research) different preferences reflected in
    different elasticities of demand
  • Arbitrage not possible
  • Example movie theaters different prices for
    children, youths, adults and seniors
  • Pi MC/Pi 1/?i ? higher prices in markets
    with lower elasticities of demand
  • Rule of thumb pricing P1/P2 (1 1/ ?2)/(1
    1/ ?1)
  • Price discrimination may enable monopolist to
    survive example (MR1 MR2 MRN MC

15
Price Discrimination
  • Third degree price discrimination
  • Same delivered price for customers
  • Freight absorption by producer
  • Customers located farther from production/distribu
    tion (warehouse) facility may have alternative
    suppliers thus more elastic demand
  • Other examples
  • Monthly vs. hourly parking rates
  • Metro Pass vs. single fare
  • Frequent flyer/use programs
  • Each consumer has downward sloping demand curve,
    thus willing to purchase more units per period of
    time only at lower per unit price
  • Consumers have different demand curves

16
Price Discrimination
  • Price discrimination in intermediate products
    when large customer has bargaining advantage
  • Large customer may be able to integrate upstream
    (internalize) implications for competition in
    downstream market
  • Price discrimination (pi.e. price concessions)
    depends upon credibility of backward integration
  • Bank loans large firms charged lower interest
    rates because they have direct access to
    commercial paper and bond markets
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