SELF-ASSESSMENT TASK
7.7
Read the feature below and then answer the
questions that follow.
The telecom industry in Pakistan
Pakistan’s telecommunications industry is one of
the hottest in the emerging economies of Asia. In
2002, there were only two million mobile phone
subscribers; by 2005, this figure had grown to
around 40 million and by mid-2012, it had soared
to 125 million. As the market has grown, so too
has competition.
Table 7.4
shows the estimated
market shares of the main providers from 2005 to
2012.
2005 (%)
2012 (%)
Mobilink 49
30
Warid 14
10
Telenor 11
25
Ufone
21
15
Zong 1
14
Table 7.4
Source:
BuddeComm Research, Australia, 2013
a
Compare the three-fi rm and fi ve-fi rm
concentration ratios for 2005 and 2012.
b
Why are these not necessarily good indicators of
change in the market structure?
c
Discuss how telecommunication companies
might compete in a growing market like that of
Pakistan.
■
There is complete freedom of entry into and exit from
the market.
■
All firms and consumers have complete information about
products, prices and means of production.
Th
e only industry that comes anywhere near this theoretical
model is possibly agriculture. Here, there are many buyers
and sellers and products but the problem in searching for an
example is in fi nding products that are homogeneous. Most
real-world markets also have some barriers to entry. Perfect
competition has a lot of appeal as a yardstick because, if it
were to operate, there would be consumer sovereignty and
effi
cient production with no possibility of exploitation.
In perfect competition, the fi rm cannot do anything that
will infl uence the market price. Each individual fi rm makes
such a small contribution to output that no alteration in
its own output can signifi cantly aff ect the total supply. Th
e
fi rm can choose to produce any quantity it likes and will be
able to sell all of it at the ruling price. Th
e demand curve
facing the fi rm is therefore perfectly elastic at this price. If
the fi rm sells an extra unit of output, it will get the same
price as the one before. Th
e marginal revenue is therefore
equal to the price or the average revenue. In
Figure 7.15
, all
of the fi rm’s revenue information is in the line:
D
=
AR
=
MR
Choosing the output is the only decision that the fi rm has
to make. Th
is will be done by considering the relevant
costs of production. Given the assumption that the fi rm
wants to maximise profi ts, the chosen output will be where
MC
=
MR.
Th
e fi rm’s total revenue is the price multiplied by the
output sold. If the total cost of producing this output is
lower than the total revenue, then the fi rm will be making
an abnormal profi t. If TC
=
TR, then the fi rm would break
even and be making normal profi t.
It is possible that the costs could be higher than the
revenue, in which case the fi rm may be about to exit the
industry. Th
is may not be immediate: a fi rm can continue
in production making short-run losses, as long as the
price received by the fi rm covers the AVC, usually the
cost of paying the wage bill and buying the materials for
production. Th
is is the shut-down price. Th
e fi rm would be
making a loss equivalent to the amount of fi xed costs. In
this situation the fi rm’s only hope is that the market price
will rise to increase its revenue or that it can take action to
reduce its costs of production.
Where the revenue is lower than costs in the long
run fi rms will be leaving the industry. If a lot of them
do, the eff ect will be a reduction in the overall market
supply, which will raise the market price, giving the rest
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: