Industrial Economics
Essay Preview: Industrial Economics
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Industrial Economics (01OJAPH)September 17, 2015ISTRUCTIONSAvailable time: 2 hours.If the text is not clear enough, explicitly illustrate the assumptions that you are introducing. Neatly present the analytical results; the qualitative discussion needs to be brief, clear and to the point.Solve the exercises 1/2 and the exercises 3/4 on separate sheets. Please, put your name on every sheet.Exercise 1Solve the equilibrium in an oligopoly Ć laĀ Cournot with NĀ firms and inverse demand pĀ = 1 ā QĀ with Q = Ī£ i=1ā¦NĀ qiĀ . The total production costs are symmetric and equal to C(q) = c q2. Discuss the trend of the consumer surplus as a function of N.Solution outlineThe profit of the j-th firm is ĻjĀ = qjĀ (1 ā Q) ā c qj2.The FOC is āĻj/āqjĀ = 1 ā Ī£ i=1ā¦N, iā jĀ qi ā 2 qj ā 2 cĀ qj = 0.Invoking symmetry, the quantity at the equilibrium will be q*Ā =Ā 1/(1+N+2c), and consequently p*Ā =Ā (1+2c)/(1+N+2c) and Ļ* = (1+c)/(1+N+2c)2.Since the price is reduced when N increases, the consumer surplus must correspondingly increase. This result could be obtained with no calculation considering that the consumer surplus increases with N in the case of linear costs, and this must be true for a still stronger reason in case of decreasing scale returns, as in the case of our exercise.The consumer surplus is anyway (1āp*) Q*/2 = Q*2/2 = N2/[2(1+N+2c)2], actually increasing with N.Exercise 2Consider a ātraditionalā Hotelling pricing game: two firms (A and B) are located at the extremes of a linear city of unit length; the consumer mass is normalized to 1; consumers are uniformly distributed and their reserve utility is equal to 1. Production costs are assumed to be null and the firms fix their prices (pAĀ and pB) simultaneously. Transport costs cĀ (x) (i.e., the cost for travelling a distance x), however, are equal to t1Ā if xĀ < Ā½ and to t2Ā if xĀ ā„Ā Ā½ (where t2 < 1 and t2Ā ā t1 = ĪtĀ > 0.
Individuate the position of the indifferent consumer as a function of pAĀ and pBĀ and verify the market coverage (i.e., verify who is ready to consume given a given couple of prices).Verify whether pAĀ = pBĀ = 1 ā t1Ā is a Nash equilibrium.Solution outlineIf pAĀ = pBĀ ā¤Ā 1 ā t2Ā the indifferent consumer is located in xĀ = Ā½ and the market is covered. If 1 ā t1Ā ā„Ā pAĀ = pBĀ > 1 ā t2, the consumers located in xĀ < Ā½ purchase from A, the consumers located in xĀ >Ā Ā½ purchase from B, the consumer located in xĀ = Ā½ is not willing to consume. If pAĀ = pBĀ > 1 ā t1Ā no one will consume.If pAĀ < pBĀ andĀ pBĀ ā pAĀ ā¤Ā ĪtĀ the consumers located in xĀ < Ā½ purchase from A, the consumers located in xĀ >Ā Ā½ purchase from B as long as pA, pBĀ ā¤Ā 1 ā t1. The consumer located in xĀ = Ā½ purchases (from A) only if pAĀ ā¤Ā 1 ā t2. Otherwise he will not consume.If pAĀ < pBĀ andĀ pBĀ ā pAĀ > Īt every consumer prefersĀ A with respect to B; those positioned in xĀ < Ā½ will actually consume if pAĀ ā¤Ā 1 ā t1; those positioned in xĀ ā„Ā Ā½ will actually consume if pAĀ ā¤Ā 1 ā t2, otherwise they will not consume.