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Managerial Economics & Business Strategy

Managerial Economics & Business Strategy. Chapter 7 The Nature of Industry. Industry Concentration. Four-Firm Concentration Ratio The sum of the market shares ( w i = Sales i / Sales of entire industry) of the top four firms in the defined industry: C 4 = w 1 + w 2 + w 3 + w 4

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Managerial Economics & Business Strategy

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  1. Managerial Economics & Business Strategy

    Chapter 7 The Nature of Industry
  2. Industry Concentration Four-Firm Concentration Ratio The sum of the market shares (wi = Salesi / Sales of entire industry) of the top four firms in the defined industry: C4 = w1 + w2 + w3 + w4 Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) The sum of the squared market shares of firms in a given industry, multiplied by 10,000: HHI = 10,000 S wi2 Limitations Market Definition: National, regional, or local? Global Market: Foreign producers excluded Industry definition and product classes See concentration ratios on WSU online Structure
  3. Rothschild Index A measure of the elasticity of industry demand for a product relative to that of an individual firm (or how price sensitive an individual firm’s demand is relative to the entire market): R =ET / EF ET = elasticity of demand for the total market EF = elasticity of demand for the product of an individual firm. R has a value between 0 (perfect competition) and 1 (monopoly). When an industry is composed of many firms, each producing similar products, the Rothschild index will be close to zero (i.e., the firm’s % age change in QD given a 1% change in price > the overall industry’s).
  4. Own-Price Elasticities of Demand and Rothschild Indices
  5. Potential Entry & Barriers to Entry Numerous factors make it difficult for firms to enter an industry Patents Economies of scale or large capital outlays Strategic behavior by existing firm(s) to keep competition out! Can’t enter by law (e.g., Liquor stores in Utah, Utah Power). When 1 firm has control or ownership of a scarce resource (e.g., DeBeers) When government auctions off “monopoly rights”
  6. Pricing Behavior The Lerner Index L = (P - MC) / P = -1/EQx,Px A measure of the difference between price and marginal cost. An index from 0 to 1. L≈0 implies more competition Indication of the degree of market power a firm has. L also equals -1/EQx,Px (see chapter 8). What this shows is that the more elastic demand, the smaller the L. Markup Factor Rearranging the above formula, P = (1/(1-L)) MC P/MC = 1/(1-L) is the markup factor. Conduct
  7. Lerner Indices & Markup Factors
  8. Lerner Index and Elasticity of Demand (ED)
  9. Integration and Merger Activity Integration leads to larger companies than would otherwise exist without integration Vertical Integration Where various stages in the production of a single product are carried out by one firm. Horizontal Integration The merging of the production of similar products into a single firm. Conglomerate Mergers The integration of different product lines into a single firm. Obj. of Merging: reduce transaction costs, enjoy benefits of economies of scale/scope, increase market power, etc.
  10. DOJ/FTC Merger Guidelines Based on HHI = 10,000 S wi2 Merger may be challenged if HHI exceeds 1800, or would be after merger, and Merger increases the HHI by more than 100 But... Recognizes efficiencies: “The primary benefit of mergers to the economy is their efficiency potential...which can result in lower prices to consumers...In the majority of cases the Guidelines will allow firms to achieve efficiencies through mergers without interference...”
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