最新微观经济学16寡头垄断PPT课件.ppt
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1、微观经济学微观经济学1616寡头垄断寡头垄断Imperfect competition refers to those market structures that fall between perfect competition and pure monopoly.Imperfect competition includes industries in which firms have competitors but do not face so much competition that they are price taker.Between Monopoly and Perfect c
2、ompetitionA duopoly is an oligopoly with two members.It is the simplest type of oligopoly.16.2.1 A Duopoly ExamplePrice and Quantity SuppliedThe price of water in a perfectly competitive market would be driven to where the marginal cost is zero:P=MC=$0Q=120 gallonsThe price and quantity in a monopol
3、y market would be where total profit is maximized:P=$60Q=60 gallons16.2.1 A Duopoly ExamplePrice and Quantity SuppliedThe socially efficient quantity of water is 120 gallons,but a monopolist would produce only 60 gallons of water:So what outcome then could be expected from duopolists?16.2.1 A Duopol
4、y ExampleThe duopolists may agree on a monopoly outcome.Collusion合谋合谋An agreement among firms in a market about quantities to produce or prices to charge.Cartel卡特尔卡特尔A group of firms acting in unison.16.2.2 Competition,Monopolies,and CartelsAlthough oligopolists would like to form cartels and earn m
5、onopoly profits,often that is not possible.Antitrust laws prohibit explicit agreement among oligopolists as matter of public policy.16.2.2 Competition,Monopolies,and CartelsA Nash equilibrium(纳什均衡纳什均衡)is a situation in which economic actors interacting with one another each choose their best strateg
6、y given the strategies that all the others have chosen.16.2.3 The Equilibrium for an Oligopoly When firms in an oligopoly individually choose production to maximize profit,they produce quantity of output greater than the level produced by monopoly and less than the level produced by competition.The
7、oligopoly price is less than the monopoly price but greater than the competitive price(which equals marginal cost).16.2.3 The Equilibrium for an Oligopoly Possible outcome if oligopoly firms pursue their own self-interests:Joint output is greater than the monopoly quantity but less than the competit
8、ive industry quantity.Market price are lower than the monopoly price but greater than the competitive industry price.Total profits are less than the monopoly profit.16.2.3 Equilibrium for an Oligopoly 16.2.4 How the Size of an Oligopoly Affects the Market OutcomeHow increasing the number of sellers
9、affects the price and quantity:The output effect:Because price is above marginal cost,selling more at the going price raises profits.(First it sells more output and receives a revenue of py from that.)The price effect:Raising production will increase the amount sold,which will lower the price and th
10、e profit per unit on all units sold.(second,the monopolist,pushes the price down by p and it gets this lower price on all the output it has been selling.)r=p y+y p16.2.4 How the Size of an Oligopoly Affects the Market OutcomeAs the number of sellers in an oligopoly grows larger,an oligopolistic mark
11、et looks more and more like a competitive market.The price approaches marginal cost,and the quantity produced approaches the socially efficient level.16.3 Game Theory and The Economics Of Cooperation Game theory is the study of how people behave in strategic situations.“Strategic”decisions are those
12、 in which each person,in deciding what actions to take,must consider how others might respond to that action.Because the number of firms in an oligopolistic market is small,each firm must act strategically.Each firm knows that its profit depends not only on how much it produces but also on how much
13、the other firms produce.16.3 Game Theory and The Economics Of CooperationGame theory is not necessary for understanding competitive or monopoly markets.1)In a competitive market,each firm is so small compared to the market that strategic interactions with other firms are not important.2)In a monopol
14、ized market,strategic interactions are absent because the market has only one firm.But game theory is quite useful for understanding the behavior of oligopolies.16.3.1 The Prisoners DilemmaA particularly important“game”is called the prisoners dilemma.The prisoners dilemma provides insight into the d
15、ifficulty in maintaining cooperation.Many times in life,people(firms)fail to cooperate with one another even when cooperation would make them better off.Figure 2 The Prisoners DilemmaCopyright2003 Southwestern/Thomson LearningBonnie s DecisionConfessConfessBonnie gets 8 yearsClyde gets 8 yearsBonnie
16、 gets 20 yearsClyde goes freeBonnie goes freeClyde gets 20 yearsgets 1 yearBonnie Clyde gets 1 yearRemain SilentRemainSilentClydesDecisionThe prisoners dilemma is a particular“game”between two captured prisoners that illustrates why cooperation is difficult to maintain even when it is mutually benef
17、icial.(Mankiw,3th edition,p355-356.)Lets call them Bonnie and Clyde.The police have enough evidence to convict Bonnie and Clyde of the minor crime of carrying an unregistered gun,so that each would spend a year in jail.The police also suspect that the two criminals have committed a bank robbery toge
18、ther,but they lack hard evidence to convict them of this major crime.The police question Bonnie and Clyde in separate rooms,and they offer each of them the following deal:“Right now,we can lock you up for 1 year.If you confess to the bank robbery and implicate涉及 your partner,however,well give you im
19、munity and you can go free.Your partner will get 20 years in jail.But if you both confess to the crime,we wont need your testimony and we can avoid the cost of a trial,so you will each get an intermediate sentence of 8 years.”If Bonnie and Clyde,heartless bank robbers that they are,care only about t
20、heir own sentences,what would you expect them to do?Would they confess or remain silent?Figure 2 shows their choices.Each prisoner has two strategies:confess or remain silent.The sentence each prisoner gets depends on the strategy he or she chooses and the strategy chosen by his or her partner in cr
21、ime.Consider first Bonnies decision.She reasons as follows:”I dont know what Clyde is going to do.If he remains silent,my best strategy is to confess,since then Ill go free rather than spending a year in jail.If he confesses,my best strategy is still to confess,since then Ill spend 8 years in jail r
22、ather than 20.So,regardless of what Clyde does,I am better off confessing.”In the language of game theory,a strategy is called a dominant strategy if it is the best strategy for a player to follow regardless of the strategies pursued by other players.In this case,confessing is a dominant strategy fo
23、r Bonnie,She spends less time in jail if she confesses,regardless of whether Clyde confesses or remains silent.Now consider Clydes decision.He faces exactly the same choices as Bonnie,and he reasons in much the same way.Regardless of what Bonnie does,Clyde can reduce his time in jail by confessing.I
24、n other words,confessing is also a dominant strategy for Clyde.In the end,both Bonnie and Clyde confess,and both spend 8 years in jail.Yet,from their standpoint,this is a terrible outcome.If they had both remained silent,both of them would have been better off,spending only 1 year in jail on the gun
25、 charge.By each pursuing his or her own interests.The two prisoners together reach an outcome that is worse for each of them.16.3.1 The Prisoners DilemmaThe dominant strategy is the best strategy for a player to follow regardless of the strategies chosen by the other players.Cooperation is difficult
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