oligopolies

(noun)

An oligopoly is a market form in which a market or industry is dominated by a small number of sellers (oligopolists). Because there are few sellers, each oligopolist is likely to be aware of the actions of the others.

Related Terms

  • generic

Examples of oligopolies in the following topics:

  • Product Differentiation

    • Oligopolies can form when product differentiation causes decreased competition within an industry.
    • While some oligopoly industries make standardized products - tools, copper, and steep pipes, for example - others make differentiated products: cars, cigarettes, soda, and cell phone manufacturers.
    • For example, the soft drink industry in the US is an oligopoly dominated by the Coca-Cola Company, the Dr.
    • Some companies are able to use marketing to achieve product differentiation, encouraging the formation of oligopolies.
    • Explain the relationship between product differentiation and the existence of an oligopoly
  • Entry Barriers

    • One important source of oligopoly power are barriers to entry: obstacles that make it difficult to enter a given market.
    • One important source of oligopoly power is barriers to entry.
    • In industrialized economies, barriers to entry have resulted in oligopolies forming in many sectors, with unprecedented levels of competition fueled by increasing globalization.
    • Oligopolies have also formed in heavily-regulated markets such as wireless communications: in some areas only two or three providers are licensed to operate .
    • Explain the necessity of entry barriers for the existence of an oligopoly
  • Few Sellers

    • An oligopoly - a market dominated by a few sellers - is often able to maintain market power through increasing returns to scale.
    • The existence of oligopoly requires that a few firms are able to gain significant market power, preventing other, smaller competitors from entering the market.
    • Monopolies and oligopolies, however, often form when an industry has increasing returns to scale at relatively high output levels.
    • Therefore, the oligopoly firms have a built-in defense against new competition.
    • Explain how increasing returns to scale will cause a higher prevalence of oligopolies
  • Game Theory Applications to Oligopoly

    • Game theory provides a framework for understanding how firms behave in an oligopoly.
    • In an oligopoly, firms are interdependent; they are affected not only by their own decisions regarding how much to produce, but by the decisions of other firms in the market as well.
    • For example, game theory can explain why oligopolies have trouble maintaining collusive arrangements to generate monopoly profits.
    • While game theory is important to understanding firm behavior in oligopolies, it is generally not needed to understand competitive or monopolized markets.
  • Price Leadership

    • Price leadership is a form of tacit collusion that oligopolies may use to achieve a monopoly-like market outcome.
    • Oligopolies are defined by one firm's interdependence on other firms within the industry.
    • Unlike perfect competition and monopoly, uncertainty about how rival firms interact makes the specification of a single model of oligopoly impossible.
    • In this way, all three can receive the benefits of oligopoly .
  • Oligopoly

    • An oligopoly is a market that is characterized by the interdependence of firms.
    • The kinked demand model begins with an oligopoly that has two sellers of a homogeneous good.
    • The typical characteristics that constitute an oligopoly are:
    • Primary metals industries are examples of oligopolies with homogeneous goods.
    • Instant breakfast drink mixes are an example of an oligopoly with differentiated products.
  • Collusion and Competition

    • Firms in an oligopoly can increase their profits through collusion, but collusive arrangements are inherently unstable.
    • Oligopoly is a market structure in which there are a few firms producing a product.
    • However, collusive oligopoly is inherently unstable, because the most efficient firms will be tempted to break ranks by cutting prices in order to increase market share.
  • The Prisoner's Dilemma and Oligopoly

    • Similarly to the prisoner's dilemma scenario, cooperation is difficult to maintain in an oligopoly because cooperation is not in the best interest of the individual players.
    • Coca-Cola and Pepsi compete in an oligopoly, and thus are highly competitive against one another (as they have limited other competitive threats).
  • Organization and Ownership of the Media

    • There are also some large-scale owners in an industry that are not the causes of monopoly or oligopoly.
    • In most countries, this system of licensing makes many markets local oligopolies.
  • Credit Unions

    • Credit unions increase competition (big banks tend to be oligopolies, while credit unions are intrinsically smaller in scale, thus high in quantity)
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