In: Economics
Market structures provide a starting point for assessing economic environments in business. An understanding of how companies and markets work allows business professionals and leaders to accurately judge industry and market news, policy changes and legislation and how the economy shapes important decisions.
“Market structures” refer to the different market characteristics that determine relations between sellers to each another, of sellers to buyers and more. There are several basic defining characteristics of a market structure, such as the following:
Types of market structures
There are four basic types of market structures.
Pure Competition
Pure or perfect competition is a market structure defined by a large number of small firms competing against each other. A single firm doesn’t have significant marketing power, and as a result, the industry produces an optimal level of output because firms don’t have the ability to influence market prices. Supply and demand determine the amount of goods and services produced, along with the market prices set by the companies in the market. Products are identical to competitors’ products, and there are no significant barriers to entering and exiting the market.
The pure competition market structure is rare in the real world. This is a theoretical model that is helpful when looking at industries with similar characteristics. In other words, it’s a good reference point for other market structures. The best examples of pure competition market structures are stock, agricultural and craft markets.
Monopolistic Competition
Like pure competition, monopolistic competition is a market structure referring to a large number of small firms competing against each other. However, firms in monopolistic competition sell similar but highly differentiated products. Lowest possible cost production, which leads to optimal output in a pure competition market structure, is not assumed.
These factors give firms in a monopolistic competition market power to charge higher prices within a certain range. The products are remarkably similar, but small differences become the basis for firms’ marketing and advertising. Differentiation can include style, brand name, location, packaging, advertisement, pricing strategies and more.
Examples include fast food restaurants, clothing stores, breakfast cereal companies, service and repair markets, tutoring companies and beauty salons and spas. Products and services at a beauty salon are quite similar, but these companies will use certain value propositions, such as quality of services and appealing pricing, to draw more customers. They may even advertise brand-name beauty products that are themselves in monopolistic competition — there is little that separates makeup and hair products, as far as what constitutes these products and their use.
Producers freely enter the market when profits are attractive. There is easy entry and exit in monopolistic competition.
Oligopoly
An oligopoly is dominated by a few firms, resulting in limited competition. They can collaborate with or compete against each other to use their collective market power to drive up prices and earn more profit.
Entering into an oligopoly is difficult. The most powerful companies have control over raw materials, patents and financial and physical resources that create barriers for potential entries. This is what helps set high prices. However, if prices are too high, buyers will head to product substitutes in the market.
Products may be homogenous or differentiated. Typically, there are three to five dominant firms, but this number can vary depending on the market. For instance, video gaming consoles are an oligopoly with three companies — Microsoft, Sony and Nintendo — dominating the market. Other examples of oligopolies are the automobile and gasoline industries.
Pricing, profits and production levels change as the dynamic relationship between sellers and buyers changes.
Pure Monopoly
A monopoly exists when there’s a single firm that controls the entire market. The firm and industry are synonymous. This firm is the sole producer of a product, and there are no close substitutes. Because there are no alternatives, the firm has the highest level of market power. Hence, monopolists often reduce output, increase prices and earn more profit.
Entry or exit is blocked in a pure monopoly. This can occur for more than one reason, as seen in two of the best examples for pure monopolies: public utilities and professional sports leagues.
Public utilities are considered natural monopolies because they have economies of scale — a firm receives certain cost advantages due to its size — in an extreme way. New firms cannot start up because it would be incredibly expensive to reach scale in a short amount of time. Building a maze of pipes and wires to be able to compete with the firm would require a lot of capital, and there would be legal barriers to entry. That’s why there are typically government monopolies (or government regulations) for natural monopolies.