FORMS OF INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATION
Forms of Industrial Organization
Forms of Industrial Organization
Consumers are faced with making decisions about which product to buy every day. Unless consumers have a personal preference on which product to buy, they tend to base their buying decisions on price. Manufacturers control pricing based on supply and demand, but there are other factors which come into play when companies decide how much money to charge consumers. The presence of monopolies, oligopolies, monopolistic competitions, and perfect competitions allow manufacturers to manage pricing accordingly. This paper will provide an example of a company for each of the four market situations and how pricing is affected by a company's status in these markets.
Pure Competition
Pure competition is defined as "the presence of a large number of firms producing a standardized product (that is, a product identical to that of other producers?). New firms can enter or exit the industry very easily." (McConnell, p.413) Pure competition, although very rare will usually be found in markets that are selling agricultural goods, fish products, foreign exchange, basic metals, and stock shares (McConnell, p.415).
The fast food industry appears to fall inline with McConnell's perspective. Examining this industry and in particular McDonald's Corporation we find the presence of numerous organizations (Burger King, Jack in the Box, Hardees and Wendy's) that are all producing standardized products (such as fries, hamburgers).
McDonald's pays close attention to their pricing strategy because they are in such a volatile market (i.e. dollar menus, value meals, family meals). For instance, McDonald's partnered with the Seminole ...