Lecture 15
Lecture 15
Oligopoly I
1
2
Oligopoly
Joseph Louis F.
Bertrand (1822 - 1900)
5
Bertrand Competition
u All firms set their prices simultaneously
and independently
u Assume that each firm’s marginal
production cost is constant at c
u Each firm takes as given the price set
by the other firm, so as to maximize
profits
6
Bertrand Competition
u Q: Is there a stable outcome?
u A: Yes. Exactly one
7
Bertrand Competition
u Q: Is there a stable outcome?
u A: Yes. Exactly one. All firms set their
prices equal to the marginal cost c.
Why?
8
Bertrand Competition
u Homogeneity implies that consumers
will buy from the lowest-price seller
u Firms realize that the demand they face
depends both on its own price and the
price set by the other firm
9
Bertrand Competition
u Any firm charging a higher price than its
rival will sell no output
u Any firm charging a lower price than its
rival will obtain the entire market demand
(assuming no capacity constraints)
u Hence, at equilibrium, all firms must set
the same price
10
Bertrand Competition
u Suppose the common price set by all
firms is higher than marginal cost c
11
Bertrand Competition
u Suppose the common price set by all
firms is higher than marginal cost c
u Then one firm can just slightly lower its
price and sell to all the buyers, thereby
increasing its profit
12
Bertrand Competition
u Suppose the common price set by all
firms is higher than marginal cost c.
u Then one firm can just slightly lower its
price and sell to all the buyers, thereby
increasing its profit.
u The only common price which prevents
undercutting is c
u Hence, this is the only stable outcome
13
Bertrand Paradox
u Firms price at marginal cost
u Firms make zero profits
u Two firms suffice to replicate the perfectly
competitive outcome!
MC(Q)
p(Q)
MR(Q)
17
Quantity Competition
£/output unit
The blue curve is the residual
demand firm 1 faces. The orange
curve is the corresponding MR
q
2 MC(q)
p(Q)
MR(Q)
18
Quantity Competition
£/output unit
The blue curve is the residual
demand firm 1 faces. The orange
curve is the corresponding MR
q2
MC(Q)
p(Q)
q1(q 2) q
MR(Q)
19
Quantity Competition
£/output unit
The blue curve is the residual
demand firm 1 faces. The orange
curve is the corresponding MR
q’
2 MC(q)
p(Q)
q1(q’2 ) q
MR(Q)
20
Quantity Competition; An Example
u Suppose that the market inverse
demand function is
p (Q) 60 Q = 60 – (q1 +q2)
and that the firms’ total cost functions are
c1 (q1 ) q
2
1
and c2 (q2 ) 15q2 q .
2
2
21
Quantity Competition; An Example
Then, for any given q2, firm 1’s profit function is
(q ; q ) (60 q q )q q .
1 2 1 2 1
2
1
22
Quantity Competition; An Example
Then, for any given q2, firm 1’s profit function is
(q1 ; q2 ) (60 q1 q2 )q1 q .
2
1
q1 R 1(q2 ) 15 .25q 2 .
24
9 15 q1
25
Quantity Competition; An Example
Similarly, given y1, firm 2’s profit function is
60 q1 2q2 15 2q2 0.
q2
27
Quantity Competition; An Example
60 q1 2q2 15 2q2 0.
q2
Firm 2’s best response to q1 is
45 q1
q2 R2 (q1 ) .
4
28
Quantity Competition; An Example
q2
q 15 .25 45 q
*
1
2
*
1
32
Quantity Competition; An Example
q R 1(q ) 15 .25q
*
1
*
2
*
2 and q2* R 2 (q1* ) .25(45 q1* )
1
q 15 .25 45 q
* 2 *
1 q 13
*
1
33
Quantity Competition; An Example
q R 1(q ) 15 .25q
* * *
and q R 2 (q ) .25(45 q )
* * *
1 2 2 2 1 1
1
q 15 .25 45 q
* 2 *
1 q 13
*
1
Hence
q .25(45 13) 8.
*
2
34
Quantity Competition; An Example
q1* R 1(q2* ) 15 .25q 2* and q2* R 2 (q1* ) .25(45 q1* )
q 15 .25 45 q
*
1
2
*
1 q 13
*
1
60 q1 R 1(q2 ) 15 .25q 2 .
15 45 q1
36
Quantity Competition; An Example
q2
60 q1 R 1(q2 ) 15 .25q 2 .
Cournot equilibrium
45 q1
q2 R2 (q1 ) .
8 4
13 48 q1
37
Cournot Paradox?
u The equilibrium price is thus:
p* = 60 -13 - 8 = 39
u Plugging this prices and firms’ outputs in
each firm’s profit function yields
1* = 338, 2* = 126
u Profits are positive in equilibrium!
u Firms have market power!
u Only when the number of firms approaches
infinity would profits approach zero
38
Bertrand with differentiated products
Product Differentiation between two or more
products exists when the products possess
attributes that, in the minds of consumers, set
the products apart from one another and
make them less than perfect substitutes
MC1 = MC2 = 5
42
An Example
u Given the rival’s price, firms again
behave as monopolists over their
residual demands
u In our example, what is firm 1's residual
demand when firm 2 sets price 10? 0?
D0
0
Coke’s quantity
44
An Example
Coke’s price
110
100 Pepsi’s price = £0 for D0 and £10 for D10
D10
D0
0
Coke’s quantity
45
An Example
Coke’s price
110
100 Pepsi’s price = £0 for D0 and £10 for D10
D10
D0
MR0
0
Coke’s quantity
46
An Example
Coke’s price
110
100 Pepsi’s price = £0 for D0 and £10 for D10
D10
D0
MR10
MR0
0
Coke’s quantity
47
An Example
Coke’s price
110
100 Pepsi’s price = £0 for D0 and £10 for D10
D10
D0
MR10
5
MR0
0
Coke’s quantity
48
An Example
Coke’s price
110
100 Pepsi’s price = £0 for D0 and £10 for D10
30
27.5
D10
D0
MR10
5
MR0
0
45 50 Coke’s quantity
49
An Example
Analytically, the best response price of Firm 1 is the
one that solves the problem:
Maxp1 π1 = p1q1(p1,p2) – 5q1(p1,p2) = (p1 - 5)q1(p1,p2)
= (p1 - 5)(100 – 2p1 + p2)
The solution is then given by the equation:
∂π1 / ∂p1 = 100 – 2p1 + p2 - 2(p1 - 5) = 0
Which leads to expression
p1 = R1*(p2 ) = 27.5 + p2 / 4
Because the problem is symmetric
p2 = R2*(p1 ) = 27.5 + p1 / 4
50
Best Response (Reaction) Functions
Pepsi’s price (p2)
27.5
27.5
27.5