Classroom Companion: Business
· Formation of Oligopolies 202 13
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Introduction to Digital Economics
13.3 · Formation of Oligopolies
202 13 traffic from the mobile network operators and reselling it to their own customers at a lower price than the network operator. Another category of competitors is mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs) owning some infrastructure such as subscrip- tion and location management databases and gateway exchanges but leasing radio access infrastructure from ordinary mobile network operators. The mobile market is not big enough to support many operators of different types so that mobile tele- communications within a country has become an oligopoly. There are several reasons why mobile communications is an oligopoly market. The most important (and often overlooked) reason is that the frequency spectrum allocated to mobile communications is rather narrow and can only be sliced into a rather small number of slots broad enough to support a single operator. This then limits the number of operators that can build their own network in a region or country. Each mobile network operator must then be granted a license for using a particular slice of the available spectrum. The second reason why there are so few mobile network operators is that it is expensive to build and manage mobile network infrastructures, in particular, since the licensing authorities may require that the network cover a certain percentage of the population (e.g., everyone) and not just the most profitable parts of the coun- try. Resellers and MVNOs require only small capital investments and are easier to establish, and the mobile network operators are forced by government regulations to let them buy bulk traffic or lease infrastructure to affordable prices, thereby enhancing competition. Streaming services are serving two markets: the provider of information to be streamed and the receiver of the streamed content. In music streaming, there are a few big providers, where Spotify, Apple Music, and SoundCloud are the most prominent. These providers are, on the oligopsony side, trying to capture artists and record labels on exclusive contracts and, on the oligopoly side, trying to cap- ture listeners using different business models. This includes offering a combination of freemium and premium services (Spotify), creating communities of artists and listeners (SoundCloud), and offering access to a vast library of songs (Apple Music). The competition between oligopolies is difficult because decisions made by one stakeholder may have direct impact on prices, competition, and market shares and, thus, changing the market composition entirely. One particular problem is that the competitors may fall into the prisoner’s dilemma trap. The prisoner’s dilemma is one of the most studied games in game theory (See the Wikipedia articles on “Game theory” and “Prisoner’s dilemma” for more details). The payoff matrix for the prisoner’s dilemma game for a duopoly is illustrated in . Fig. 13.3 . There are two competitors, firm A and firm B, competing for the same customers. Both firms know that the other firm is likely to lower the price to attract customers from its competitor. The decision each firm is facing is then either to keep the price unchanged or lower the price. The pros and cons for this decision are summarized in the payoff matrix as shown in figure. 5 If the two firms do not change the price, the situation remains unchanged. 5 If firm A decides to lower the price, then firm A may gain so many customers from firm B that its revenue becomes larger than it was before, while the reve- Download 5.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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