hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

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Health Economics Lecture 9 Structure, Conduct, Performance, and Market Analysis

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Page 1: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Health EconomicsLecture 9

Structure, Conduct, Performance, and Market

Analysis

Page 2: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Objectives

SCP ParadigmPerfect Competition

MonopolyBrand Competition

Oligopoly

Page 3: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Structure, Conduct, and Performance

Page 4: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Basic ConditionsSupply

Technology

Unionization

Legal Environment

Economies of Scale

Demand

Price Elasticity

Demand Conditions

Page 5: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Market ConditionsNumber, type, size distribution of sellers and payers

Type of Product

Barriers to Entry

Information Asymmetry

Page 6: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

ObjectivesProfit Maximization

Quantity Maximization

Quality Maximization

Discretionary Spending

Other

Page 7: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Public PolicyTaxes and Subsidies

Antitrust Regulations

Price Regulations

Certificate of Need Laws

Peer Review Organizations

Page 8: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

ConductPrice Behavior

Product Promotion

Research and Development

Page 9: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

PerformanceProduction and Allocation Efficiency

Equity

Technological Progress

Page 10: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Market StructuresPerfect Competition

Monopoly

Monopolistic Competition

Oligopoly

Page 11: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

PerfectCompetition

Monopolistic Competition

Oligopoly Monopoly

Number of Firms

Many Many Few One

Type of Product Identical Different Similar Unique

Ease of Entry Easy Easy Substantial Blocked

Demand D = MR DynamicGame

TheoryD > MR

ExamplesCommodities

RiceApples

Cell Phones UtilitiesGovernment

Market Structure and Power

0% 100%

Page 12: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Perfect CompetitionMany SellersMany BuyersNo barriers

Same productTiny share

Page 13: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Q

$

Perfect Competition

Demand=

MRPrice

Marginal Costs

QProductively

Efficient

AverageCosts

Profit

Page 14: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Monopoly

Only One SellerNo Close Substitutes

Barrier to Entry

Page 15: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Barriers to Entry

Government ProtectionKey Resource

Network ExternalitiesEconomies of Scale

Page 16: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Patents

Copyrights

20 Years

Lifetime plus 70 Years

Page 17: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Franchise

Exclusive Legal Provider

Page 18: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

New Drugs

10 Years of Testing before Approval

10 Years of Monopoly

Page 19: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Network Externalities

The more who use it

The more valuable it becomes

Page 20: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Natural Monopoly

One firm can supply entire market at a lower average cost than two or

more firms

Page 21: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Natural Monopoly

The more I makethe lower my costs

Large Fixed Costs

Page 22: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Is competition always good?

Sometimes it can lead to higher prices

Page 23: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

MonopolyOutput and Price

Lower Price:

Good: Sell More

Bad: Less Revenue Per Unit

Page 24: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Q

P

Perfect Competition

Marginal CostMC Average Cost

ATC

Total Cost

$

Quantity

ProfitDemand=MR

Total Revenue

Page 25: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Demand

MR

=

Perfect CompetitionMonopoly

Page 26: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Perfect Competition Perfect Competition Perfect Competition Monopoly Monopoly

Q D TR MR D TR MR

1

2

3

4

5

Monopoly: To get more Quantity must lower price

$3 $3 $3 $5 $5 $5

$3 $6 $3 $4 $8 $3

$3 $9 $3 $3 $9 $1

$3 $12 $3 $2 $8 -$1

$3 $15 $3 $1 $5 -$3

Page 27: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Demand MR=

Perfect CompetitionMonopoly

Page 28: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Monopoly

Price

1 3

$5

$3

$4

$2

$1

$02 4 5

Price Qty TR MR

$5

$3

$4

$2

$1

1

3

2

4

5

Qty

$5

$8

$9

$8

$5

$5

$3

$1

-$1

-$3

LoseG

ain

Lose

-$2

-$1

-$3

-$4

Gain

$3

$4

$2

$1LoseG

ain

LoseG

ainLose

Gai

n Demand

Marginal Revenue MR

Page 29: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Marginal CostMC

Q

P

Marginal Revenue MR

Monopoly

Average CostATC

Cost

$

Q

Profit

Demand

Deadweight Loss

Consumer Surplus

1. MR=MC?2. TR= P x Q3. TC=ATC x Q4. Profit =TR-TCor (P-ATC) x Q

Page 30: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

AntitrustLaws

Collusion

Felony

Page 31: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

MonopolisticCompetition

Brands competing with each other.

Differentiating products

Pay more for more choices

Page 32: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Q

$

D

MR

=

Monopoly

Perfect Competition

Page 33: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Q

$

Monopolistic Competition

DMR

Short Run

Long Run

Steep Demand

Demand Flattens

Page 34: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Q

$Short Run

Long Run

DMR

MC

ATCProfit

Profits disappearin the long run

due to competition

High PriceLarge Quantity

Lower PriceLower Quantity

QSQ

PPS

L

L

Demand Flattens

Profit

Monopolistic Competition

Page 35: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

D

MR

MC

Competition flattens the Demand Curve

and squeezes profits.Profits

Page 36: Hen 368 lecture 9 structure, conduct, performance, and market analysis

Q

$

Market Competition

Short Run Demand

Short Run Marginal Revenue

Long Run Demand

Long Run Marginal Revenue

Marginal Costs

AverageTotal Costs

QSR

PSR

QLR

PLR