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Duopoly

A duopoly (from Greek δύο, duo "two" and πωλεῖν, polein "to sell") is a type of oligopoly where two firms have dominant or exclusive control over a market, and most (if not all) of the competition within that market occurs directly between them.

Duopoly is the most commonly studied form of oligopoly due to its simplicity. Duopolies sell to consumers in a competitive market where the choice of an individual consumer choice cannot affect the firm in a duopoly market, as the defining characteristic of duopolies is that decisions made by each seller are dependent on what the other competitor does. Duopolies can exist in various forms, such as Cournot, Bertrand, or Stackelberg competition. These models demonstrate how firms in a duopoly can compete on output or price, depending on the assumptions made about firm behavior and market conditions.

one two few
sellers monopoly duopoly oligopoly
buyers monopsony duopsony oligopsony

Duopoly models in economics and game theory edit

Cournot Duopoly edit

Cournot Model in Game Theory: In 1838, Antoine A. Cournot published a book titled "Researches Into the Mathematical Principles of the Theory of Wealth" in which he introduced and developed this model for the first time. As an imperfect competition model, Cournot duopoly (also known as Cournot competition), in which two firms with identical cost functions compete with homogenous products in a static context, is also known as Cournot competition.[1]

The Cournot model, shows that two firms assume each other's output and treat this as a fixed amount, and produce in their own firm according to this.

The Cournot duopoly model relies on the following assumptions:[2]

  • Each firm chooses a quantity to produce independently
  • All firms make this choice simultaneously
  • The cost structures of the firms are public information

In this model, two companies, each of which chooses its own quantity of output, compete against each other while facing constant marginal and average costs.[3] The market price is determined by the sum of the output of two companies.   is the equation for the market demand function.[4]

  • Market with two firms i = 1, 2 with constant marginal cost ci
  • Inverse market demand for a homogeneous good: P(Q)=a-bQ
  • Where Q is the sum of both firms' production levels, Q = q1 + q2
  • Firms choose their quantity simultaneously (static game)
  • Firms maximize their profit:

Π1(q1, q2) = (P(q1 + q2) − c1)*q1

Π2(q1, q2) = (P(q1 + q2) − c2)*q2

The general process for obtaining a Nash equilibrium of a game using the best response functions is followed in order to discover a Nash equilibrium of Cournot's model for a specific cost function and demand function.

A Nash Equilibrium of the Cournot model is a (q1*, q2*) such that

For a given q1* , q2* solves:

MAXq1 Π1(q1, q2*) = (P(q1 + q2*) − c1)q1 and

MAXq2 Π2(q1*, q2) = (P(q1* + q2) − c2)q2

Given the other firm's optimal quantity, each firm maximizes its profit over the residual inverse demand. In equilibrium, no firm can increase profits by changing its output level

Two first order conditions equal to zero are the best response.[5]

Cournot's duopoly marked the beginning of the study of oligopolies, and specifically duopolies, as well as the expansion of the research of market structures, which had previously focussed on the extremes of perfect competition and monopoly.

In the Cournot duopoly model, firms choose the quantity of output they produce simultaneously, taking into consideration the quantity produced by their competitor. Each firm's profit depends on the total output produced by both firms, and the market price is determined by the sum of their outputs. The goal of each firm is to maximize its profit given the output produced by the other firm. This process continues until both firms reach a Nash equilibrium, where neither firm has an incentive to change its output level given the output of the other firm.

Bertrand Duopoly edit

Bertrand Model in Game Theory: The Bertrand competition was developed by a French mathematician called Joseph Louis François Bertrand after investigating the claims of the Cournot model in "Researches into the mathematical principles of the theory of wealth, 1838".[4]

According to the Cournot model, firms in a duopoly would be able to keep prices above marginal cost and hence be extremely profitable.[6] Bertrand took issue with this. In this market structure, each firm could only choose whole amounts and each firm receives zero payoffs when the aggregate demand exceeds the size of the amount that they share with each other. The market demand function is  .

The Bertrand model has similar assumptions to the Cournot model:

  • Two firms
  • Homogeneous products
  • Both firms know the market demand curve
  • However, unlike the Cournot model, it assumes that firms have the same MC . It also assumes that MC is constant

The Bertrand model, in which, in a game of two firms, competes in price instead of output. Each one of them will assume that the other will not change prices in response to its price cuts. When both firms use this logic, they will reach a Nash equilibrium.

  • Consider price competition among two firms (i = 1, 2) selling homogeneous good
  • Downward sloping market demand D(p), with D’(p)<0
  • Constant, symmetric marginal cost c1 = c2 = c
  • Static game: firms set prices simultaneously
  • Rationing rule of demand:
  1. lowest priced firm wins all demand at its price
  2. if prices are tied, each firm gets half of market demand at this price
  • Firm i’s profits: Πi = (pi − c)Di(pi , pj)

Let pm be the monopoly price, pm = argmaxp(p − c)D(p)

  • Firm i’s best response is:

If pj> pm, Ri(pj)=pm

If c < pj ≤ pm ,Ri(pj) =pj-€

If pj ≤ c, Ri(pj) =c

For rival prices above cost, each firm has incentive to undercut rival to get the whole demand.if rival prices below cost, firms make losses when it attracts demand; firm better off charging at cost level. Nash equilibrium is p1 = p2 = c

Bertrand Paradox: Under static price competition with homogenous products and constant, symmetric marginal cost, firms price at the level of marginal cost and make no economic profits.

In contrast to the Cournot model, the Bertrand duopoly model assumes that firms compete on price rather than quantity. Each firm sets its price simultaneously, anticipating that the other firm will not change its price in response. When both firms use this logic, they will reach a Nash equilibrium, where neither firm has an incentive to change its price given the price set by the other firm. In this model, firms tend to price their products at the level of their marginal cost, resulting in zero economic profits, a phenomenon known as the Bertrand Paradox.

Characteristics of duopoly edit

  1. Existence of only two sellers.
  2. Interdependence: the action of each firm influences the demand faced by their rival.[7]
  3. Presence of monopoly elements: as long as products are differentiated, the firms enjoy some monopoly power, as each product will have some loyal customers.
  4. It is the most basic form of oligopoly
  5. Barriers to entry: high entry barriers are often present in duopolies, making it difficult for new firms to enter the market.

Quality standards edit

In a duopoly, quality standards can play a significant role in the competitive dynamics between the two firms. A low-quality manufacturer may benefit from a slightly stringent quality standard in the absence of sunk costs, whereas a high-quality producer may suffer from it. Consumer welfare improves if the firm generating the higher quality does not considerably enhance its quality in response to its competitor's increase in quality. Exit from the industry is triggered by a sufficiently strict requirement. The high-quality producer exits first when there are no sunk costs.[8] In some cases, firms may engage in a quality competition, attempting to outdo one another by improving their products or services to attract more customers.

Politics edit

Like a market, a political system can be dominated by two groups, which exclude other parties or ideologies from participation. One party or the other tends to dominate government at any given time (the Majority party), while the other has only limited power (the Minority party). According to Duverger's law, this tends to be caused by a simple winner-take-all voting system without runoffs or ranked choices. The United States and many Latin American countries, such as Costa Rica, Guyana, and the Dominican Republic have two-party government systems.

Duopoly in Danish court politics

The prime minister-finance minister duopoly is an unusual form of court politics. There have been few other countries where the prime minister and the Treasury have had such a tumultuous relationship as Australia and the United Kingdom. There have been some confrontations in the past when the Finance ministry did not have the full support of the prime minister, leading to internal ministerial battles over economic strategy.

A permanent civil service is a basic requirement for the duopoly system to function properly. The permanent civil service in general, and the Socialist Party in particular, are critical to the duopoly's effective operation. The conventional inter-governmental duopoly is carried by civil servants.

The duopoly is confronted with some quandaries, such as tensions between different groups in the office over their relative positions. Departmental budget cuts are being made across the board.

The prime ministerial-finance-ministry duopoly requires more credibility. Trust is a rare commodity among Australians and Britons. Denmark has a lot to offer. The Danish duopoly works together. Australia and the United Kingdom have competitive duopolies, and competitive duopolies are unstable.[9]

Types of duopoly edit

Cournot duopoly edit

A Cournot duopoly is a model of strategic interaction between two firms where they simultaneously choose their output levels, assuming the rival's output level is fixed. The firms compete on quantity, and each firm attempts to maximize its profit given the other firm's output level. This leads to a Nash equilibrium where neither firm has an incentive to change its output, given the other firm's output.

Bertrand duopoly edit

In a Bertrand duopoly, two firms compete on price instead of quantity. Each firm assumes that its rival's price is fixed and chooses its own price to maximize profit. This model predicts that, under certain conditions, firms will set prices equal to marginal cost, leading to perfect competition.

Stackelberg duopoly edit

A Stackelberg duopoly is a model where one firm (the leader) chooses its output level first, followed by the other firm (the follower). The follower observes the leader's output decision and adjusts its own output to maximize profit. The Stackelberg model often results in a higher total output and lower market price than the Cournot and Bertrand models.

Examples in business edit

A commonly cited example of a duopoly is that involving Visa and Mastercard, who between them control a large proportion of the electronic payment processing market. In 2000 they were the defendants in a United States Department of Justice antitrust lawsuit.[10][11] An appeal was upheld in 2004.[12]

Examples, where two companies control an overwhelming proportion of a market, are:

Media edit

In Finland, the state-owned broadcasting company Yleisradio and the private broadcaster Mainos-TV had a legal duopoly (in the economists' sense of the word) from the 1950s to 1993. No other broadcasters were allowed. Mainos-TV operated by leasing air time from Yleisradio, broadcasting in reserved blocks between Yleisradio's own programming on its two channels. This was a unique phenomenon in the world. Between 1986 and 1992 there was an independent third channel but it was jointly owned by Yle and M-TV; only in 1993 did M-TV get its own channel.

In Kenya, mobile service providers Safaricom and Airtel in Kenya form a duopoly in the Kenyan telecommunications industry.

In Singapore, the mass media industry is presently dominated by two players, namely Mediacorp and SPH Media Trust.[18]

In the United Kingdom, the BBC and ITV formed an effective duopoly (with Channel 4 originally being economically dependent on ITV) until the development of multichannel from the 1990s onwards.

Broadcasting edit

Duopoly is also used in the United States broadcast television and radio industry to refer to a single company owning two outlets in the same city.

This usage is technically incompatible with the normal definition of the word and may lead to confusion, inasmuch as there are generally more than two owners of broadcast television stations in markets with broadcast duopolies. In Canada, this definition is therefore more commonly called a "twinstick".

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Tremblay, Carol Horton; Tremblay, Victor J. (June 2011). "The Cournot–Bertrand model and the degree of product differentiation". Economics Letters. 111 (3): 233–235. doi:10.1016/j.econlet.2011.02.011. ISSN 0165-1765.
  2. ^ Dranove, David (2016). Economics of Strategy (7th ed.). Hoboken:Wiley.
  3. ^ Symeonidis, George (January 2003). "Comparing Cournot and Bertrand equilibria in a differentiated duopoly with product R&D". International Journal of Industrial Organization. 21 (1): 39–55. doi:10.1016/S0167-7187(02)00052-8. ISSN 0167-7187.
  4. ^ a b Cournot, Antoine Augustin (1897) [Originally published 1838]. Recherches surplus Principes Mathématiques de la Théorie des Richesses [Researches Into the Mathematical Principles of the Theory of Wealth]. Translated by Bacon, Nathaniel T. New York: The Macmillan Company. hdl:2027/hvd.32044024354821. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  5. ^ Motta, Massimo (2004). Competition Policy: Theory and Practice. Cambridge University Press.
  6. ^ Vives, Xavier (October 1984). "Duopoly information equilibrium: Cournot and bertrand". Journal of Economic Theory. 34 (1): 71–94. doi:10.1016/0022-0531(84)90162-5. ISSN 0022-0531.
  7. ^ Romeo, Giovanni (2019). "Chapter 6 - Microeconomic theory in a static environment". Elements of Numerical Mathematical Economics with Excel: Static and Dynamic Optimization. Academic Press. pp. 295–392. doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-817648-1.00006-2. ISBN 978-0128176481.
  8. ^ Crampes, Claude; Hollander, Abraham (January 1995). "Duopoly and quality standards". European Economic Review. 39 (1): 71–82. doi:10.1016/0014-2921(94)00041-W. ISSN 0014-2921.
  9. ^ Rhodes, R. A. W.; Salomonsen, Heidi Houlberg (March 2021). "Duopoly, court politics and the Danish core executive". Public Administration. 99 (1): 72–86. doi:10.1111/padm.12685.
  10. ^ "Complaint for Equitable Relief for Violations of 15 U.S.C. § 1: U.S. v. Visa U.S.A., et al" (PDF). justice.gov. U.S. Department of Justice. October 7, 1998. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  11. ^ . The Thistle. 12 (2). July 4, 2000. Archived from the original on September 2, 2002. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  12. ^ "Amex is suing Visa and Mastercard". BBC News. November 15, 2004. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  13. ^ Vincent, James (February 16, 2017). "99.6 percent of new smartphones run Android or iOS". The Verge. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  14. ^ "Mobile Operating System Market Share Worldwide". gs.statcounter.com. StatCounter. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  15. ^ Miller, John Jackson. "2017 Comic Book Sales to Comics Shops". Comichron. from the original on January 23, 2018. Retrieved January 23, 2018. Share of Overall Units—Marvel 38.30%, DC 33.93%; Share of Overall Dollars—Marvel 36.36%, DC 30.07%
  16. ^ "Big Two Comic Publishers Lose Share". ICv2. January 8, 2014. from the original on February 5, 2016. Retrieved September 22, 2015.
  17. ^ Kramer-Miller, Ben (June 25, 2013). "Norfolk Southern Corp. Looks Like A Solid Investment". Seeking Alpha. Retrieved October 7, 2014.
  18. ^ "Singapore profile - Media". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 23 May 2023. Retrieved 2 August 2023.

duopoly, duopoly, from, greek, δύο, πωλεῖν, polein, sell, type, oligopoly, where, firms, have, dominant, exclusive, control, over, market, most, competition, within, that, market, occurs, directly, between, them, most, commonly, studied, form, oligopoly, simpl. A duopoly from Greek dyo duo two and pwleῖn polein to sell is a type of oligopoly where two firms have dominant or exclusive control over a market and most if not all of the competition within that market occurs directly between them Duopoly is the most commonly studied form of oligopoly due to its simplicity Duopolies sell to consumers in a competitive market where the choice of an individual consumer choice cannot affect the firm in a duopoly market as the defining characteristic of duopolies is that decisions made by each seller are dependent on what the other competitor does Duopolies can exist in various forms such as Cournot Bertrand or Stackelberg competition These models demonstrate how firms in a duopoly can compete on output or price depending on the assumptions made about firm behavior and market conditions one two fewsellers monopoly duopoly oligopolybuyers monopsony duopsony oligopsonyContents 1 Duopoly models in economics and game theory 1 1 Cournot Duopoly 1 2 Bertrand Duopoly 2 Characteristics of duopoly 3 Quality standards 4 Politics 5 Types of duopoly 5 1 Cournot duopoly 5 2 Bertrand duopoly 5 3 Stackelberg duopoly 6 Examples in business 7 Media 8 Broadcasting 9 See also 10 ReferencesDuopoly models in economics and game theory editCournot Duopoly edit Cournot Model in Game Theory In 1838 Antoine A Cournot published a book titled Researches Into the Mathematical Principles of the Theory of Wealth in which he introduced and developed this model for the first time As an imperfect competition model Cournot duopoly also known as Cournot competition in which two firms with identical cost functions compete with homogenous products in a static context is also known as Cournot competition 1 The Cournot model shows that two firms assume each other s output and treat this as a fixed amount and produce in their own firm according to this The Cournot duopoly model relies on the following assumptions 2 Each firm chooses a quantity to produce independently All firms make this choice simultaneously The cost structures of the firms are public informationIn this model two companies each of which chooses its own quantity of output compete against each other while facing constant marginal and average costs 3 The market price is determined by the sum of the output of two companies P Q a b Q displaystyle P Q a bQ nbsp is the equation for the market demand function 4 Market with two firms i 1 2 with constant marginal cost ci Inverse market demand for a homogeneous good P Q a bQ Where Q is the sum of both firms production levels Q q1 q2 Firms choose their quantity simultaneously static game Firms maximize their profit P1 q1 q2 P q1 q2 c1 q1P2 q1 q2 P q1 q2 c2 q2The general process for obtaining a Nash equilibrium of a game using the best response functions is followed in order to discover a Nash equilibrium of Cournot s model for a specific cost function and demand function A Nash Equilibrium of the Cournot model is a q1 q2 such thatFor a given q1 q2 solves MAXq1 P1 q1 q2 P q1 q2 c1 q1 andMAXq2 P2 q1 q2 P q1 q2 c2 q2Given the other firm s optimal quantity each firm maximizes its profit over the residual inverse demand In equilibrium no firm can increase profits by changing its output levelTwo first order conditions equal to zero are the best response 5 Cournot s duopoly marked the beginning of the study of oligopolies and specifically duopolies as well as the expansion of the research of market structures which had previously focussed on the extremes of perfect competition and monopoly In the Cournot duopoly model firms choose the quantity of output they produce simultaneously taking into consideration the quantity produced by their competitor Each firm s profit depends on the total output produced by both firms and the market price is determined by the sum of their outputs The goal of each firm is to maximize its profit given the output produced by the other firm This process continues until both firms reach a Nash equilibrium where neither firm has an incentive to change its output level given the output of the other firm Bertrand Duopoly edit Bertrand Model in Game Theory The Bertrand competition was developed by a French mathematician called Joseph Louis Francois Bertrand after investigating the claims of the Cournot model in Researches into the mathematical principles of the theory of wealth 1838 4 According to the Cournot model firms in a duopoly would be able to keep prices above marginal cost and hence be extremely profitable 6 Bertrand took issue with this In this market structure each firm could only choose whole amounts and each firm receives zero payoffs when the aggregate demand exceeds the size of the amount that they share with each other The market demand function is Q P a b P displaystyle Q P a bP nbsp The Bertrand model has similar assumptions to the Cournot model Two firms Homogeneous products Both firms know the market demand curve However unlike the Cournot model it assumes that firms have the same MC It also assumes that MC is constantThe Bertrand model in which in a game of two firms competes in price instead of output Each one of them will assume that the other will not change prices in response to its price cuts When both firms use this logic they will reach a Nash equilibrium Consider price competition among two firms i 1 2 selling homogeneous good Downward sloping market demand D p with D p lt 0 Constant symmetric marginal cost c1 c2 c Static game firms set prices simultaneously Rationing rule of demand lowest priced firm wins all demand at its price if prices are tied each firm gets half of market demand at this priceFirm i s profits Pi pi c Di pi pj Let pm be the monopoly price pm argmaxp p c D p Firm i s best response is If pj gt pm Ri pj pmIf c lt pj pm Ri pj pj If pj c Ri pj cFor rival prices above cost each firm has incentive to undercut rival to get the whole demand if rival prices below cost firms make losses when it attracts demand firm better off charging at cost level Nash equilibrium is p1 p2 cBertrand Paradox Under static price competition with homogenous products and constant symmetric marginal cost firms price at the level of marginal cost and make no economic profits In contrast to the Cournot model the Bertrand duopoly model assumes that firms compete on price rather than quantity Each firm sets its price simultaneously anticipating that the other firm will not change its price in response When both firms use this logic they will reach a Nash equilibrium where neither firm has an incentive to change its price given the price set by the other firm In this model firms tend to price their products at the level of their marginal cost resulting in zero economic profits a phenomenon known as the Bertrand Paradox Characteristics of duopoly editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Existence of only two sellers Interdependence the action of each firm influences the demand faced by their rival 7 Presence of monopoly elements as long as products are differentiated the firms enjoy some monopoly power as each product will have some loyal customers It is the most basic form of oligopoly Barriers to entry high entry barriers are often present in duopolies making it difficult for new firms to enter the market Quality standards editIn a duopoly quality standards can play a significant role in the competitive dynamics between the two firms A low quality manufacturer may benefit from a slightly stringent quality standard in the absence of sunk costs whereas a high quality producer may suffer from it Consumer welfare improves if the firm generating the higher quality does not considerably enhance its quality in response to its competitor s increase in quality Exit from the industry is triggered by a sufficiently strict requirement The high quality producer exits first when there are no sunk costs 8 In some cases firms may engage in a quality competition attempting to outdo one another by improving their products or services to attract more customers Politics editLike a market a political system can be dominated by two groups which exclude other parties or ideologies from participation One party or the other tends to dominate government at any given time the Majority party while the other has only limited power the Minority party According to Duverger s law this tends to be caused by a simple winner take all voting system without runoffs or ranked choices The United States and many Latin American countries such as Costa Rica Guyana and the Dominican Republic have two party government systems Duopoly in Danish court politicsThe prime minister finance minister duopoly is an unusual form of court politics There have been few other countries where the prime minister and the Treasury have had such a tumultuous relationship as Australia and the United Kingdom There have been some confrontations in the past when the Finance ministry did not have the full support of the prime minister leading to internal ministerial battles over economic strategy A permanent civil service is a basic requirement for the duopoly system to function properly The permanent civil service in general and the Socialist Party in particular are critical to the duopoly s effective operation The conventional inter governmental duopoly is carried by civil servants The duopoly is confronted with some quandaries such as tensions between different groups in the office over their relative positions Departmental budget cuts are being made across the board The prime ministerial finance ministry duopoly requires more credibility Trust is a rare commodity among Australians and Britons Denmark has a lot to offer The Danish duopoly works together Australia and the United Kingdom have competitive duopolies and competitive duopolies are unstable 9 Types of duopoly editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Cournot duopoly edit A Cournot duopoly is a model of strategic interaction between two firms where they simultaneously choose their output levels assuming the rival s output level is fixed The firms compete on quantity and each firm attempts to maximize its profit given the other firm s output level This leads to a Nash equilibrium where neither firm has an incentive to change its output given the other firm s output Bertrand duopoly edit In a Bertrand duopoly two firms compete on price instead of quantity Each firm assumes that its rival s price is fixed and chooses its own price to maximize profit This model predicts that under certain conditions firms will set prices equal to marginal cost leading to perfect competition Stackelberg duopoly edit A Stackelberg duopoly is a model where one firm the leader chooses its output level first followed by the other firm the follower The follower observes the leader s output decision and adjusts its own output to maximize profit The Stackelberg model often results in a higher total output and lower market price than the Cournot and Bertrand models Examples in business editA commonly cited example of a duopoly is that involving Visa and Mastercard who between them control a large proportion of the electronic payment processing market In 2000 they were the defendants in a United States Department of Justice antitrust lawsuit 10 11 An appeal was upheld in 2004 12 Examples where two companies control an overwhelming proportion of a market are Airbus and Boeing in the largest commercial aircraft market in the world Nvidia and AMD in the GPU market Intel and AMD in the desktop CPU market Google s Android and Apple s iOS make up over 99 of the mobile operating system market 13 14 Coca Cola and Pepsi in the soft drink market resulting in the cola wars The two companies control nearly all of the cola beverage market DC and Marvel in the American comic book market 15 16 Woolworths and Coles in the Australian supermarket market Myer and David Jones in the Australian upmarket department store market Husqvarna and Stihl in the chainsaw market Doppelmayr Garaventa Group and HTI Group consisting of Poma amp Leitner in the market for ropeways transport commonly used in mountainous regions ski resorts cities and amusement parks Norfolk Southern and CSX operate a duopoly on freight rail traffic in the Eastern United States 17 and Union Pacific and BNSF form a duopoly operating in the Midwest southern and western United States Media editIn Finland the state owned broadcasting company Yleisradio and the private broadcaster Mainos TV had a legal duopoly in the economists sense of the word from the 1950s to 1993 No other broadcasters were allowed Mainos TV operated by leasing air time from Yleisradio broadcasting in reserved blocks between Yleisradio s own programming on its two channels This was a unique phenomenon in the world Between 1986 and 1992 there was an independent third channel but it was jointly owned by Yle and M TV only in 1993 did M TV get its own channel In Kenya mobile service providers Safaricom and Airtel in Kenya form a duopoly in the Kenyan telecommunications industry In Singapore the mass media industry is presently dominated by two players namely Mediacorp and SPH Media Trust 18 In the United Kingdom the BBC and ITV formed an effective duopoly with Channel 4 originally being economically dependent on ITV until the development of multichannel from the 1990s onwards Broadcasting editMain article Duopoly broadcasting Duopoly is also used in the United States broadcast television and radio industry to refer to a single company owning two outlets in the same city This usage is technically incompatible with the normal definition of the word and may lead to confusion inasmuch as there are generally more than two owners of broadcast television stations in markets with broadcast duopolies In Canada this definition is therefore more commonly called a twinstick See also edit nbsp Business portal nbsp Look up duopoly in Wiktionary the free dictionary Monopoly Oligopoly Two party systemReferences edit Tremblay Carol Horton Tremblay Victor J June 2011 The Cournot Bertrand model and the degree of product differentiation Economics Letters 111 3 233 235 doi 10 1016 j econlet 2011 02 011 ISSN 0165 1765 Dranove David 2016 Economics of Strategy 7th ed Hoboken Wiley Symeonidis George January 2003 Comparing Cournot and Bertrand equilibria in a differentiated duopoly with product R amp D International Journal of Industrial Organization 21 1 39 55 doi 10 1016 S0167 7187 02 00052 8 ISSN 0167 7187 a b Cournot Antoine Augustin 1897 Originally published 1838 Recherches surplus Principes Mathematiques de la Theorie des Richesses Researches Into the Mathematical Principles of the Theory of Wealth Translated by Bacon Nathaniel T New York The Macmillan Company hdl 2027 hvd 32044024354821 Retrieved January 18 2023 Motta Massimo 2004 Competition Policy Theory and Practice Cambridge University Press Vives Xavier October 1984 Duopoly information equilibrium Cournot and bertrand Journal of Economic Theory 34 1 71 94 doi 10 1016 0022 0531 84 90162 5 ISSN 0022 0531 Romeo Giovanni 2019 Chapter 6 Microeconomic theory in a static environment Elements of Numerical Mathematical Economics with Excel Static and Dynamic Optimization Academic Press pp 295 392 doi 10 1016 B978 0 12 817648 1 00006 2 ISBN 978 0128176481 Crampes Claude Hollander Abraham January 1995 Duopoly and quality standards European Economic Review 39 1 71 82 doi 10 1016 0014 2921 94 00041 W ISSN 0014 2921 Rhodes R A W Salomonsen Heidi Houlberg March 2021 Duopoly court politics and the Danish core executive Public Administration 99 1 72 86 doi 10 1111 padm 12685 Complaint for Equitable Relief for Violations of 15 U S C 1 U S v Visa U S A et al PDF justice gov U S Department of Justice October 7 1998 Retrieved January 18 2023 Credit Card Antitrust Suit The Thistle 12 2 July 4 2000 Archived from the original on September 2 2002 Retrieved January 18 2023 Amex is suing Visa and Mastercard BBC News November 15 2004 Retrieved January 18 2023 Vincent James February 16 2017 99 6 percent of new smartphones run Android or iOS The Verge Retrieved January 18 2023 Mobile Operating System Market Share Worldwide gs statcounter com StatCounter Retrieved January 18 2023 Miller John Jackson 2017 Comic Book Sales to Comics Shops Comichron Archived from the original on January 23 2018 Retrieved January 23 2018 Share of Overall Units Marvel 38 30 DC 33 93 Share of Overall Dollars Marvel 36 36 DC 30 07 Big Two Comic Publishers Lose Share ICv2 January 8 2014 Archived from the original on February 5 2016 Retrieved September 22 2015 Kramer Miller Ben June 25 2013 Norfolk Southern Corp Looks Like A Solid Investment Seeking Alpha Retrieved October 7 2014 Singapore profile Media BBC News British Broadcasting Corporation 23 May 2023 Retrieved 2 August 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Duopoly amp oldid 1198175694, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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