The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

90


HOW MUCH SHOULD


I PRODUCE, GIVEN


THE COMPETITION?


EFFECTS OF LIMITED COMPETITION


B


y the second half of the
17th century economists
had begun to observe the
effects in markets of monopolies
and of fierce competition. They
found that monopolies tended to
restrict output to keep prices and
profits high. Where there was
plenty of competition, prices were
driven down to the level of costs,
profits were low, and output was

high. French economist Antoine
Cournot wanted to find out what
happened when there were only a
few firms selling similar products.

Dueling duopolies
Cournot created his model based
on a duopoly of two firms selling
identical spring water to consumers.
The two firms are not allowed to
form a cartel by working together,

If there are just two
competing firms (a duopoly)
producing identical goods...

The market will be in a
Cournot equilibrium
where the two reaction
curves meet.

Each firm reacts by
selecting its best output
given the level of output the
other firm chooses (plotted
on a reaction curve).

... each firm knows that the
other firm’s output will
affect their own profits.

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Markets and firms

KEY THINKERS
Antoine Augustin Cournot
(1801–77)
Joseph Bertrand (1822–1900)

BEFORE
1668 German scientist Johann
Becher discusses the impact
of competition and monopoly
in his Political Discourse.

1778 Adam Smith describes
how perfect competition
maximizes social welfare.

AFTER
1883 French mathematician
Joseph Bertrand changes the
strategic choices in Cournot’s
model from quantity to price.

1951 US economist John
Nash publishes the general
definition of equilibrium for
game theory, using Cournot’s
duopoly as his first example. This is how much the

firm should produce,
given the competition.
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