real-world competition and technology 17 real-world competition and technology it is ridiculous to...

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Real-World Competition and Technology 1 7 Real-World Competition and Technology It is ridiculous to call this an industry. This is rat eat rat; dog eat dog. I’ll kill ’em, and I’m going to kill ’em before they kill me. You’re talking about the American way of survival of the fittest. — Ray Kroc (founder of McDonald’s) CHAPTER 17 Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin

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Real-World Competition and Technology

17

Real-World Competition and Technology

It is ridiculous to call this an industry. This is rat eat rat; dog eat dog. I’ll kill ’em, and I’m going to kill ’em before they kill me. You’re talking about the American way of survival of the fittest.

— Ray Kroc (founder of McDonald’s)

CHAPTER

17

Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Real-World Competition and Technology

17

Managers’ Incentives and the Need for Monitoring

• Managers have an incentive to keep costs down, but their salaries are included in costs

• To address this problem, firms sometimes give managers incentive-compatible contracts in which the incentives of each of the two parties to the contract are made to correspond as closely as possible

• This creates a monitoring problem which is the need to oversee employees to ensure that their actions are in the best interest of the firm

• Employees’ incentives differ from the owner’s incentives

17-2

Real-World Competition and Technology

17

What Do Real-World Firms Maximize?

• Firms have complicated goals that reflect the organizational structure and incentives built into the system

• Although profit is one goal of a firm, often firms focus on other intermediate goals such as cost and sales

• Some firms do not push for cost efficiency and become lazy monopolists

• Lazy monopolists are firms that do not push for efficiency, but merely enjoy the position they are already in

17-3

Real-World Competition and Technology

17

The Lazy Monopolist and X-Inefficiency

• Lazy monopolists are not profit maximizers

• They perform as efficiently as is consistent with keeping their jobs

• The result is called X–inefficiency where firms operate far less efficiently than they technically could

• Such firms have monopoly positions, but they don’t make large monopoly profits which can result in earning normal profits or even a loss

17-4

Real-World Competition and Technology

17

How Competition Limits the Lazy Monopolist

• New firms or international competition can push lazy monopolies to be more competitive

• Corporate takeovers, or the threat of one, can improve efficiency

• A corporate takeover is when another firm or group of individuals issues a tender offer (buy the stock) to gain control and install its own managers

• Nonprofit organizations may display lazy monopolist tendencies

17-5

Real-World Competition and Technology

17

How Monopolistic Forces Affect Perfect Competition

• Laws, social values, and customs in the United States do not allow perfect competition to work because our government emphasizes other social goals besides efficiency

• The Robinson-Patman Act and several state laws prevent firms from charging a price that is too low

• The U.S. has laws, regulations, and programs that prevent agricultural markets from working competitively

17-6

Real-World Competition and Technology

17

Movement Away from Competitive Markets

S

D

P

Q

PL

PM

L M

A BC

If suppliers of O-L can keep suppliers of L-M out of the

market, price increases to PL

O

Profit increases by A

Deadweight loss is B+C

Consumers lose A+B in consumer surplus

The suppliers kept out of the market lose C in

producer surplus

17-7

Real-World Competition and Technology

17

How Competition Forces Affect Monopoly

• Competitive forces work to break down monopoly by using political or economic forces

• Lobbying to change the law protecting monopoly

• Developing a similar product without violating a patent

• Reverse engineering is the process of a firm buying other firms products, disassembling them, studying them, and then copying them within the limits of the law

17-8

Real-World Competition and Technology

17

How Firms Protect Their Monopolies

Monopolies spend money to maintain their monopoly by:

• Advertising

• Lobbying

• Producing goods that are difficult to copy

• Not taking advantage of their monopoly position and charging a lower price

• Firms will buy monopoly power until the marginal cost of maintaining the monopoly equals the marginal benefit

17-9

Real-World Competition and Technology

17

Establishing Market Position

• It is argued that modern competition is a winner–take–all competition

• In winner–take–all markets, the initial competition is on establishing market position

• The winner who achieves a monopoly can charge significantly higher prices without facing any competition

17-10

Real-World Competition and Technology

17

Technology, Efficiency, and Market Structure

• Technological development is the discovery of new or improved products or methods of production

• Because the global market is significantly larger than a domestic one, globalization provides an incentive to develop new technology

• Dynamic efficiency refers to a market’s ability to promote cost-reducing or product-enhancing technological change

• Market structures that best promote technological change are dynamically efficient

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Real-World Competition and Technology

17

Market Structure and Technology

• There is no incentive to develop new technologies because they earn no profits to fund research

• Even if they did innovate, competitors would gain from the new technology without having to pay for it

Perfect competition

• Because of market power, monopolistic competition is more conducive to technological change

• Due to ease of entry, they lack long-run profits, so their ability to recoup their investment is limited

Monopolistic competition

17-12

Real-World Competition and Technology

17

Market Structure and Technology

• Monopolists have profits but little incentive to innovate since they are protected by barriers to entry

Monopoly

• May be the market structure that is most conducive to technological change

• If competitors are innovating, it will force them to do so as well

• They receive economic profit, oligopolists have the money to carry out research and development

Oligopoly

17-13

Real-World Competition and Technology

17

Network Externalities, Standards, and Technological Lock–In

• Network externalities occur when greater use of a product increases the benefit of that product to everyone

• Network externalities lead to market standards and affect market structure

• Standards are created when a firm’s standard is accepted and dominates the market

• Technological lock-in is when prior use of a technology makes the adoption of subsequent technology difficult

• First-mover advantage helps explain the high stock prices of start-up technology companies

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