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Encyclopedia > Oligopolistic

An oligopoly is a market form in which a market is dominated by a small number of sellers (oligopolists). The word is derived from the Greek for few sellers. Because there are few participants in this type of market, each oligopolist is aware of the actions of the others. Oligopolistic markets are characterised by interactivity. The decisions of one firm influence, and are influenced by, the decisions of other firms. Strategic planning by oligopolists always involves taking into account the likely responses of the other market participants.


Oligopsony is a market form in which the number of buyers are small while the number of sellers in theory could be large. This typically happens in market for inputs where a small number of firms are competing to obtain factors of production. This also involves strategic interactions but of a different nature than when competing in the output market to sell a final output. Oligopoly refers to the market for output while oligopsony refers to the market where these firms are the buyers and not sellers (eg. a factor market). A market with a few sellers (oligopoly) and a few buyers (oligopsony) is referred to as a bilateral oligopoly.


The terms monopoly (one seller), monopsony (one buyer), and bilateral monopoly have a similar relationship.


In industrialized countries oligopolies are found in many sectors of the economy, such as cars, consumer goods, and steel production. Unprecedented levels of competition, fueled by increasing globalisation has resulted in the emergence of oligopsony in many market sectors. For example, the aerospace industry. There are now only a small number of manufacturers of civil passenger aircraft. A further instance arises in a heavily regulated market such as wireless communications. Typically the state will license only two or three providers of cellular phone services.


Oligopolistic competition can give rise to a wide range of different outcomes. In some situations, the firms may collude to raise prices and restrict production in the same way as a monopoly. Where there is a formal agreement for such collusion, this is known as a cartel. There are legal restrictions on such collusion in most countries. There does not have to be a formal agreement for collusion to take place (although for the act to be illegal there must be a real communication between companies) - for example, in some industries, there may be an acknowledged market leader which informally sets prices to which other producers respond, known as price leadership.


In other situations, competition between sellers in an oligopoly can be fierce, with relatively low prices and high production. This could lead to an efficient outcome approaching perfect competition.


Desoligopolization is the disappearance of an oligopoly.


Oligopoly theory makes heavy use of game theory to model the behaviour of oligopolies:

See also

References

  • Fudenberg, Drew, and Jean Tirole. 1991. Game Theory. Cambridge: MIT Press.
  • Tirole, Jean. 1988. The Theory of Industrial Organization. Cambridge: MIT Press.

  Results from FactBites:
 
CHAPTER D4. OLIGOPOLISTIC COMPETITION (6046 words)
Oligopolistic competition, perhaps the most common form of Western industrial and commercial market structure, is the one for which the least standard analytical specification exists.
The oligopolist's demand curve likely will be of somewhat steeper downward slope than that of the monopolistic competitor, and it may account for some fraction of the total market demand that is greater or less than 1/n if there are n firms in the market.
Oligopolistic industries are populated by firms which range in size from the corner gas station to the mega-buck corporation.
Europa/Competition/OLIGOPOLISTIC DOMINANCE (8317 words)
There is not a definitely established approach to the analysis of oligopolies in economic literature (1), and competition authorities in the EU and elsewhere have not been prolific in publishing general guidelines on these point (2).
The perspective of analysis in cases of oligopolistic dominance is necessarily different since the members of the oligopoly are by assumption capable of exerting such a constraint on each other.
There is though an important difference in that in cases of oligopolistic dominance, powerful and concentrated customers might be able to force their suppliers to compete or to provide a sufficient incentive for a member of the oligopoly to deviate from parallel behaviour.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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