IO5

?

Free Entry

  • No barriers to entry and exit other than entry costs
  • Firms enter as long as profit can be repead.

What is the equilibrium number of firms in a market characterized by free entry?

  • Assume an industry with symmetic firms, entry cost e>0.
  • Two stage game
  • Stage 2: firms compete (in q or p)
    • If n active firms, profit is   (n), with
  • Stage 1: entry decision
    • Each potential entrant must decide whether to enter the market (at a set-up cost of e)
    • Free entry equilibrium number of firms is:
    • -
  • When e increases, ne decreases
1 of 4

Free Entry

Is entry socially desirable?

  • Let n* denote the socially optimal number of firms - the number of firms that maximises social welfare W(n), given first will compete Cournot.
  • -
  • -
  • -
  • -
  • -
  • Result ne>n*
  • Cournot competiton tends to result in excessive entry, relative to the socially optimal number of firms.
2 of 4

Limit Pricing

  • Prices so low that entry is deterred. 
  • Two assumptions:
    • the entrant believes that the leader is committed to its output choice
    • the entrant has decreasing average costs over some initial level of output.
  • Incumbent commits to Qd so the entrants residual demand is Re=D(P) - Qd.
  • Incumbent prices at P=AC, pe
  • At pe entry is unprofiable
3 of 4

Credible Threats

  • Limit pricing can only work if the incumbent firm can commit to producing the limit output even if entry occurs.
  • Three ways
    • Capacity expansion
    • imperfect information
    • long term contracts
4 of 4

Comments

No comments have yet been made

Similar Economics resources:

See all Economics resources »See all Barriers to Entry resources »