Search JC Economics Essays

Custom Search
Showing posts with label limit pricing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label limit pricing. Show all posts

"Oligopoly is the most appropriate economic model of market structures that can best explain the behavior of companies in Singapore." Discuss. [25]


There are four models of market structure, namely, perfect competition, monopolistic competition, oligopoly and monopoly. In a perfect competition market, many sellers sell a homogeneous product to many buyers. In a monopolistic competitive market, many sellers sell slightly differentiated products to many buyers. A monopoly refers to a market which has only one seller of a unique product without close substitutes. An oligopoly is a firm that has several rivals, selling either a differentiated or homogeneous product, and with high barriers to entry. Firms of different industries belong to different market structures because of their different products and conditions, and different market structures have different assumptions. This essay attempts to explain the behavior of firms in Singapore according to different market structures and conclude whether oligopoly is the most appropriate model of market structure to explain the behavior of firms in Singapore.
As oligopolistic firms are always rivals to each other and have significant market share in which they jostle and engage other rivals, there will be non-price and price competitions among the few firms in an oligopolistic market. It can be argued that non-price competition includes engagement in research and development and advertising. In the long run, oligopolistic firms usually gain supernormal profits hence they have the ability and the willingness to innovate and differentiate their products from the rest further more.

Oligopolistic firms also involve in advertising. Advertising increases the demand for a product and makes it more price elastic. This enables a firm to charge higher prices but yet sell more output, thus raising its total revenue. A firm decides to advertise if it believes that the additional revenue earned will exceed the advertising expenditure incurred, thereby raising profits. Oligopolistic firms often advertise and innovate to compete effectively for survival. 
Advertising can be seen as either being informative or persuasive in nature. Informative advertising informs the consumers about the characteristics of the product while persuasive advertising aims to create brand awareness and loyalty by creating a certain image of the company of the type of consumers that the product is targeted at. Oligopolistic firms usually implement persuasive advertising. They tend to engage in more costly forms of advertisements, like having celebrity endorsements, placing large and prominent advertisements on billboards, newspapers, popular magazines and websites and advertising frequently on television. This is because they have very large output to spread out such high advertising costs unlike monopolistic competitive firms, which have considerably lower levels of output. In Singapore, firms which are oligopolistic also set up many advertisements to attract consumers and create loyalty. For example, famous brands that operate in Singapore such as L’OREAL, VISA or Ricola, always have advertisements showing before movies in the cinema. These advertisements are usually very costly due to the fact that every audience has to watch them and the advertising effects are great.
There is also price competition between oligopolistic firms, which can often be observed in reality in Singapore. Anti-competitive pricing, for example, limit pricing or predatory pricing manage to deter the entrance of potential firms or undercut existing rivals in oligopolistic markets. In addition, the high possibility of price wars also raises barriers to entry. Therefore, only few large firms remains in several industry groups in Singapore. For instance, the fast food industry, Mcdonalds , KFC and Subways are the oligopolies. 
However, there are alternative models of market structure to explain the behavior of firms in Singapore. For instance, monopolistic competition, which has four assumptions. There are large number of buyers and sellers, low barriers to entry, differentiated products and imperfect information. As individual firm’s action has no impact on its competitors and it is thus able to make independent price and output decisions. Monopolistic competitive firms, such as restaurants (Ding Tai Fung) in Singapore, hair salons (Kimage) in Singapore, and so on, sell differentiated products. This means that the products sold by one firm are similar but not identical to those sold by its competitors. Product differentiation can be real or imaginary. Due to product differentiation, a monopolistic competitive firm has some degree of market power. A monopolistic competitive firm is able to charge more than its competitors without necessarily losing all its customers because there are some customers who would still prefer its products as it better suits their preferences. 

In the long run, monopolistic competitive firms gain normal profits due to free or low barriers to entry or leaving of the market. Hence they have much lower willingness and ability to do research and development or advertise compared with oligopolistic firms. The price competition among monopolistic competitive firms is very low. They set prices independently of other firms. There is no reason to undercut competitors or engage in price wars as impact on other firms is insignificant. In Singapore, many firms are monopolistic competitive firms. For example, all the food stalls in the food courts in Singapore are monopolistic competitive firms, just as are hawker food stalls in Singapore. This is because they sell differentiated food from each other and they set their own prices. To open a small food store is not difficult or expensive. There are many food stores in Singapore and many people having their meals at these stores.

In Singapore, the national train company SMRT can be treated as a monopoly in train service industry because it takes a large proportion of the routes. A monopoly of train service, there is no price competition because SMRT is the price setter. If people want to take the train, they generally have to choose SMRT without any close substitutes. The high startup costs and running costs deter other companies from entering the train market. Hence there is no need for SMRT to use predatory pricing or limit pricing. In the long run, a monopoly gains supernormal profits. Hence, it has the ability to innovate and do research and development although it has no need to do so. SMRT can do that for increasing profits but not for survival. However, it has to in Singapore because if it cannot provide better and safer services, the government may choose to change it to other firms. 

In conclusion, oligopoly, monopolistic competition and monopoly can be used as models of market structure to explain the behavior of firms in Singapore, while clearly the idealistic model of perfect competition is always not present in the real world. In my opinion, among the three economic models, oligopoly may not be the most appropriate model because there are more small firms present in Singapore, which are monopolistic competitive firms. Different industries have different conditions hence firms may behave differently. People cannot predict that one model of market structure can explain everything. To conclude, oligopoly is an important and quite appropriate model of market structures only in some contexts and for some firms in Singapore, but not all.

JC Economics Essays - H2, H3 economics essays - tutor's comments: The essay answer addressed the requirements of the question quite well, but in an actual economics essay examination there should be appropriate, relevant, and useful economic diagrams. This is important - diagrams are important in economics and should be used whenever appropriate. What economics diagrams could have been used here? Note that when it comes to "A" levels or even undergraduate economics, economic concepts and ideas can be expressed in words, diagrams, or mathematics (which some say is a language). Therefore, for economics essays it is best to be fluent in words and diagrams/ graphs/ picture representations (for economic pictures, think of the "circular flow of income"). Also, think of the usual questions posed: how could this economics essay have been better written? Perhaps it could have benefited from more relevant and real world examples, or perhaps the examples could have been better explained in the context of the economic models? Having said that, this economics essay was answered under examination conditions, and is therefore quite high quality, well crafted, and well thought out with the required depth and range of economic ideas and concepts given a time constraint. Time management is very important in dealing with economics questions. What else do you notice about this economics essay answer? How would yours be similar, and how would yours be different? Special thanks to the contributors. 

"Monopolies exist mainly because businesses create barriers to entry by manipulating their prices to keep potential rivals from entering their business markets." Do you agree with this statement? [15]


It can be argued that monopolies indeed exist because of the presence of barriers to entry such as patents, licenses and substantial economies of scale which deter potential entrants from entering their market. These monopolies can also deter the entry of new firms through policies such as anti-competitive pricing. This essay will therefore talk about how artificial barriers to entry, most importantly anti-competitive pricing policies and methods lead to the existence of monopolies, then moving on to the anti-thesis, which is how then natural barriers to entry contribute to the existence of monopolies as well. The essay will conclude with an evaluation of which barrier to entry, artificial or natural barriers, is more significant.

The artificial barrier to entry would arguably be anti-competitive pricing. Anti-competitive pricing could be further broken down into limit pricing, which refers to the case where monopolists set their prices below the expected average costs of a potential entrant, to deter them from entering the market since they will make losses.

Predatory pricing, on the other hand, is a similar concept, except it is used in such a way that existing competitors would be driven out of the market due to the making of subnormal profits. Therefore, anti-competitive pricing allows for the existence of monopolies, since potential and existing competitors are out of the way.

There are also other artificial barriers to entry such as those created by governments. Governments could support the creation of monopolies by giving patents and licenses to certain firms only. The issue of patents means that monopoly rights are given to a firm to produce a new product or use a new process for a specified time period. Such actions of the government can then allow for the existence of monopolies since such firms are given substantial market power.
           
However, the existence of monopolies could also be due to natural barriers to entry, rather than just anti-competitive pricing policies.

One of which would be natural monopolies. A natural monopoly refers to a market where average costs are falling throughout the entire range of market demand, which makes it less costly for one firm to supply the entire market, hence supporting the existence of monopolies.

[Insert diagram on natural monopoly]

As seen from the figure above, if there were to be more than one firm in the market, the AR of each firm is not even enough to cover the LRAC. Therefore, such a situation supports the existence of monopolies since if there is only one firm, the firm could make supernormal profits.

Next, another natural barrier could be substantial (internal) economies of scale, where larger firms could reap more economies of scale and be more cost efficient. This means that potential entrants will have to produce at a large scale in order to compete and this deters them from entering the market. Such deterrence then leads to the existence of monopolies.

In conclusion, artificial barriers could more adequately explain the existence of monopolies. This is because most monopolies are run by governments whom create artificial barriers like patents and licenses to deter potential entrants. Therefore, upon evaluation, the existence of monopolies would be more significantly attributed to artificial barriers as compared to natural barriers. Hence, the statement should read that monopolies exist mainly because of artificial barriers to entry.

JC Economics Essays - H2 (A levels) sample, model economics essay answer: tutor's comments - this economics essay is well crafted, well argued, answers and analyses the issue very well. The main learning lessons from this essay are: it answers the essay question directly, it has a lot of good solid economic theory, and it is properly structured using the thesis, anti thesis, and synthesis approach which is a very good essay system that you should apply. You might want to think about how could you improve on this essay, and what other examples could you apply to this economics question. More relevant, real world, and specific examples would massively improve this economics answer, and the response would be improved vastly. Special thanks to kind contributors. 

Sponsored Ads

Please do NOT Plagiarise or Copy Economics Essays

It is one thing to learn how to write good economics essays from sample or model economics essays, but another thing if you plagiarise or copy. Do not copy economics essays.

First, if you are handing in an assignment online, there are checkers online which track sources (such as turnitin). Please craft assignments yourself. Second, if you are handing in a handwritten essay, if you copy, you will not learn and will thus not benefit, nor earn good grades when the real economics examination rolls round. Third, you can always write better essays given time and improvement. Fourth, copying is illegal under most conditions. Do not copy economics essays.

This is an economics site for you to learn how to write good economics essays by reading a range of useful articles on writing, study essay responses and contributions and sample/ model economics essays from students, teachers, and editors. We hope you can learn useful and relevant writing skills in the field of economics from our economics site. Thank you for reading and cheers!