Oligopoly 2024
Oligopoly 2024
Oligopoly
OLIGOPOLY
It is the study of strategic market interactions
with only a few sellers.
L R
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OLIGOPOLY
Game theory is a good way of studying
oligopoly.
It analyzes oligopoly decisions as if they were
games by looking at,
Rules players must follow
Payoffs they are trying to achieve
Strategies they can use to achieve them
OLIGOPOLY
Oligopoly theories
Cournot (1838) → quantity competition
Bertrand (1883) → price competition
Not competing but complementary theories
Relevant for different industries or
circumstances
OLIGOPOLY
Oligopoly theories
Cournot (1838) → quantity competition
Bertrand (1883) → price competition
Not competing but complementary theories
Relevant for different industries or circumstances
COURNOT – BASIC SET-UP
▪ Two firms
• assumed to be profit-maximizers
• each is fully described by its cost function
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COURNOT MODEL FRAMEWORK
max Π 1 (y 1 ; y 2 ) = p(y 1 + y 2 )y 1 − c 1 (y 1 ).
y1
COURNOT MODEL FRAMEWORK
Π1 p(y 1 + y 2 )
= p(y 1 + y 2 ) + y 1 − c1 (y1 ) = 0
y1 y1
Π1 p(y 1 + y 2 )
= p(y 1 + y 2 ) + y 2 − c 2 (y1 ) = 0
y2 y2
The second-order conditions for both firms should
be less than or equal to 0.
COURNOT MODEL FRAMEWORK
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COURNOT MODEL FRAMEWORK
Π 1 (f1 (y 2 ), y 2 )
0
y1
where f1(y2) is the reaction curve.
OUTPUT CHANGE DUE BELIEFS CHANGE
How would firm1 optimally change its output as
its beliefs about firm2’s output changes?
2 Π 1 (f1 (y 2 ), y 2 ) y 1 y 2
f1(y 2 ) = − 2 0
Π 1 (f1 (y 2 ), y 2 ) y 12
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FIRMS’ REACTION CURVES
p r = r and p c = c r and c
2. Each player is choosing pr and pc, so as to maximize his
expected utility given his beliefs.
COURNOT STABILITY SYSTEM
What is about this model in dynamic terms?
In this case, there is a learning process in which
each firm refines its beliefs about the other firm’s
behavior by observing its actual choice of output.
COURNOT MODEL’S ASSUMPTIONS:
1. Each firm suppose that the other firm will not
change its observed output level.
so, in general, the firm output choice of firm i in
period t is
y ti = f i(y tj−1 ); where i j representi ng firms
This gives a difference
equation in output that
traces out a “cobweb” .
COURNOT STABILITY SYSTEM
In this case, the firm1’s reaction curve is steeper
than firm 2, and the cobweb converges to the
Cournot Nash equilibrium.
So this is a stable equilibrium.
dp yi
p (Y ) 1 + = ci ( yi )
dY p
let s i = yi Y
si
p (Y ) 1 + = ci ( yi )
where is the elasticity of market demand.
COURNOT MODEL: N FIRMS
This equation shows that the Cournot model is
between the monopoly and perfect competitive
markets, according to si.
If si =1, we have monopoly condition
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COURNOT MODEL: N FIRMS
There are two special cases: first, assume firms has
constant marginal cost of ci.
Adding the equation across all n firms;
n n
np(Y ) + p(Y ) yi = ci ( yi )
i =1 i =1
n
np(Y ) + p(Y )Y = ci
i =1
Hence, industry output depends on the sum of MC and
not their distribution across firms.
COURNOT MODEL: N FIRMS
Second, consider the same MC for all firms, then
in a symmetric equilibrium si=1/n;
1
p (Y ) 1 + =c
n
In addition, if elasticity is constant, the price is a
constant markup on marginal cost.
If n approaches infinity, price must approach the
MC.
QUANTITY COMPETITION; PRICE DETERMINATION
y1* y1
COLLUSION
y2
(y1*,y2*) is the Cournot-Nash
equilibrium.
Are there other output level
pairs (y1,y2) that give
higher profits to both firms?
y2*
y1* y1
COLLUSION
y2
(y1*,y2*) is the Cournot-Nash
equilibrium.
Are there other output level
pairs (y1,y2) that give
higher profits to both firms?
y2*
y1* y1
COLLUSION
y2
(y1*,y2*) is the Cournot-Nash
equilibrium.
Higher P2
y2* Higher P1
y1* y1
COLLUSION
y2
Higher P2
y2*
y2’
Higher P1
y1* y1
y1’
COLLUSION
y2
Higher P2
y2*
y2’
Higher P1
y1* y1
y1’
COLLUSION
y2
(y1’,y2’) earns
Higher P2 higher profits for
both firms than
y2*
does (y1*,y2*).
y2’
Higher P1
y1* y1
y1’
COLLUSION
So there are profit incentives for both firms to
“cooperate” by lowering their output levels.
This is collusion.
Π c (y 1 , y 2 ) = p(y 1 + y 2 )(y 1 + y 2 ) − c 1 (y 1 ) − c 2 (y 2 )
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COLLUSION: OUTPUT DETERMINATION
The first order conditions are
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COLLUSION
The firms cannot do worse by colluding since they
can cooperatively choose their Cournot-Nash
equilibrium output levels and so earn their Cournot-
Nash equilibrium profits. So collusion must
provide profits at least as large as their
Cournot-Nash equilibrium profits.
COLLUSION
y2
(y1’,y2’) earns
Higher P2 higher profits for
both firms than
y2*
does (y1*,y2*).
y2’
Higher P1
y1* y1
y1’
COLLUSION
y2
(y1’,y2’) earns
Higher P2 higher profits for
both firms than
y2*
does (y1*,y2*).
y2’
y2” Higher P1
(y1”,y2”) even
earns
higher profits for
y1” y1* y1
both firms.
y1’
COLLUSION EQUILIBRIUM STABILITY
Is such a cartel stable?
Does one firm have an incentive to cheat on the
other?
COLLUSION
y2
~1,y~2) maximizes firm 1’s
(y
profit, while leaving firm
2’s profit at the Cournot-
Nash equilibrium level
(same isoprofit curve for
y2*
firm 2).
~
y2
y1* y1
~
y1
COLLUSION
y2 ~ ~
(y1,y2) maximizes firm 1’s profit
while leaving firm 2’s profit at
the Cournot-Nash equilibrium
level.
y2* _ _
_ (y1,y2) maximizes firm
y2
~
y
2’s profit while leaving
2
firm 1’s profit at the
Cournot-Nash
equilibrium level.
_
y1 ~ y*
1 1 y
y1
COLLUSION
y2
_
y2 ~ y*
1 y1
y1
The path of output
COLLUSION pairs that maximize
y2
one firm’s profit while
giving the other firm
at least its CN
equilibrium profit.
y2*
One of these output
_ pairs must maximize
y2 the cartel’s joint
~
y2 profit. The tangency
point of both
firms’ isoprofit curves.
_
y2 ~ y*
1 y1
y1
COLLUSION • (y1m,y2m) denotes the
y2 output levels that
maximize the cartel’s total
profit.
• It is at the tangency point
of both firms’ isoprofit
y2*
curves.
y2m
y1m y1* y1
COLLUSION EQUILIBRIUM STABILITY
Does one firm have an incentive to cheat on the
other?
I.e. if firm 1 continues to produce y1m units, is it
profit-maximizing for firm 2 to continue to
produce y2m units?
Firm 2’s profit-maximizing response to y1 = y1m is
y2 = R2(y1m).
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COLLUSION
y2
y1 = R1(y2), firm 1’s reaction curve
y1m y1
COLLUSION
Firm 2’s profit-maximizing response to y1 = y1m is
y2 = R2(y1m) > y2m.
Firm 2’s profit increases if it cheats on firm 1 by
increasing its output level from y2m to R2(y1m).
Similarly, firm 1’s profit increases if it cheats
on firm 2 by increasing its output level from y1m
to R1(y2m).
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COLLUSION
y2
y1 = R1(y2), firm 1’s reaction curve
y1 m R1(y2m) y1
COLLUSION
So a profit-seeking cartel in which firms
cooperatively set their output levels is fundamentally
unstable.
e.g. OPEC’s broken agreements.
COLLUSION: CHEATING
Hence, when firm 1 cheats and produces more
than agreed output by some small amount dy1,
assuming that firm 2 will stick with the cartel
agreement, the change on firm 1’s profits,
evaluated at the cartel solution is:
COLLUSION: CHEATING
If one firm believes the other firm will stick to the
cartel agreement, it has an incentive to deviate
and cheat.
c1 ( y1 ) = y12 and c 2 ( y 2 ) = 15 y 2 + y 22 .
QUANTITY COMPETITION; AN EXAMPLE
Then, for given y2, firm 1’s profit function is
2
P( y1 ; y 2 ) = ( 60 − y1 − y 2 ) y1 − y1 .
QUANTITY COMPETITION; AN EXAMPLE
Then, for given y2, firm 1’s profit function is
2
P( y1 ; y 2 ) = ( 60 − y1 − y 2 ) y1 − y1 .
So, given y2, firm 1’s profit-maximizing
output level solves
P
= 60 − 2y1 − y 2 − 2y1 = 0.
y1
QUANTITY COMPETITION; AN EXAMPLE
Then, for given y2, firm 1’s profit function is
2
P( y1 ; y 2 ) = ( 60 − y1 − y 2 ) y1 − y1 .
So, given y2, firm 1’s profit-maximizing
output level solves
P
= 60 − 2y1 − y 2 − 2y1 = 0.
y1 Π
= 60 − 4y 1 − y 2 = 0.
y1
I.e., firm 1’s best response to y2 is
1
y1 = R1 ( y 2 ) = 15 − y 2 .
4
QUANTITY COMPETITION; AN EXAMPLE
y2
Firm 1’s “reaction curve”
1
60 y1 = R1 ( y 2 ) = 15 − y 2 .
4
15 y1
QUANTITY COMPETITION; AN EXAMPLE
45 y1
QUANTITY COMPETITION; AN EXAMPLE
An equilibrium is when each firm’s output level is
a best response to the other firm’s output level,
for then neither wants to deviate from its output
level.
A pair of output levels (y1*,y2*) is a Cournot-Nash
equilibrium if
Cournot-Nash equilibrium
*
y2 y1* = R1(y2*) and y2* = R2(y1*)
y*1 y1
CONCLUSION
Oligopoly is the study of strategic market interactions
with only a few sellers.
Game theory is a good way of studying oligopoly, as it
models strategic behavior by agents who understand that
their actions affect others’ actions.
Oligopoly theories are focusing on either price (Bertrand) or
quantity (Cournot) competition.
In the Cournot model, the profits of one firm depend on the
amount of the other firms’ output, which in turn mean that
each firm has to expect, forecast and have some beliefs about
other firms’ output decision.
The equilibrium in Cournot model is called “Nash
equilibrium”, where it is a set of outputs (y1*, y2*) in which
each firm is choosing its profit-maximizing output level given
its beliefs about the other firm’s choice, and each firm’s 90
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REFERENCE
Varian, Hal “Advanced Microeconomic”. Chapter
16 “Oligopoly”.