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Test your basic knowledge |
Business Competition
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
business-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Game in which one player makes a move after observing the other player's move
Payoff
Monopoly (characteristics)
Sequential-move game
Covert Collusion
2. All firms and individuals willing and able to buy or sell a particular product
Perfect Competition Barriers to Entry
Market
No cooperative equilibrium
Brand Multiplication
3. Toothpaste - shampoo - restaurants - banks
Randomized pricing
Perfect Competitor Making a Profit
Examples of Monopolistic Competition
Collusion
4. When the decisions of two or more firms significantly affect each others' profits
Inefficiency
Interdependence
Oligopoly
Market
5. Multiple firms produce similar products - Firms face downward sloping demand curves - Profit maximization occurs where MC=MR - With free entry and exit - firms compete away economic profits
Monopolistic Competition
Limit pricing
Patent
Collusion
6. If many firms can supply an input and the input is not specialized - the suppliers are unlikely to have the bargaining power to limit a firm's profits
Payoff
Cutthroat Competition
Bargaining Power of Suppliers
Minimum efficient scale (full capacity)
7. In game theory - a game that is played again sometime after the previous game ends
Commodity bundling
Subgame perfect equilibrium
Covert Collusion
Repeated game
8. If production of a good requires a particular input - then control of that input can be a barrier to entry
Perfect Competitor Characteristics
Imperfect competition
Ownership of a Key Input
Natural Monopoly (local phone or electric company)
9. Ignoring the effects of their actions on each others' profits
Vertical Merger
Natural Monopoly (local phone or electric company)
Joint Venture
Non-cooperative behavior
10. A merger between firms who have a buyer/supplier relationship. Example: BF Goodrich merging with rubber plantations
Transfer pricing
Vertical Merger
Duopoly
Limit price
11. Rules - strategies - payoffs - outcomes
Market
What is game?
Stackelberg oligopoly
Cross-subsidy pricing
12. Nash equilibrium - the result when each player in a game chooses the action that maximizes his or her payoff given the actions of other players - ignoring the effects of his or her action on the payoffs received by those players (when you confess w
Non-cooperative behavior
Non-cooperative equilibrium
Sequential-move game
Monopolistic Competition
13. Intense competition in which competitors cut retail prices to gain business--oligopolistic competition
Sequential game
Price war
Third-degree price discrimination
Kinked-demand curve
14. An attempt by a firm to convince buyers that its product is different from the products of other firms in the industry
Import competition
Product differentiation
Economies of scale
Perfect Competitor Characteristics
15. Simultaneous move game that is not repeated
One-shot game
Product differentiation
Peak-load pricing
Bargaining Power of Buyers
16. Produce differentiated products. Make a profit or take a lost in the short run - in the long run the firm will break even. (MOST number of firms.)
Tacit collusion
Profit
Monopolistic Characteristics:
Minimum efficient scale (full capacity)
17. A table that shows the payoffs that each firm earns from every combination of strategies by the firms
Price war
Payoff matrix
Indefinitely repeated game
Limit price
18. Occurs when a firm produces output - whatever its level - at a higher cost than is necessary to produce it
Implicit Collusion
Cooperation
Price war
Inefficiency
19. When a manager makes a noncooperative decision
No cooperative equilibrium
Stackelberg oligopoly
Unbalanced Oligopoly
Cheating
20. A product's ability to satisfy a large number of consumers at the same time
Simultaneous consumption
Ownership of a Key Input
Mixed (randomized) strategy
No cooperative equilibrium
21. One large firm that has a significant cost advantage over many other - smaller competing firms; -the large firm operates as a monopoly: setting price and output to maximize profit; -the small firms act as perfect competitors: taking as given the mar
Sequential-move game
No cooperative equilibrium
Prisoners' dilemma
Dominant firm oligopoly
22. Variations on one good so that a firm can increase market sharea
Limit pricing
Price Leadership
Market Structure
Brand Multiplication
23. The maximum price that a buyer is willing to pay for a good - or the minimum price that a seller will accept
No cooperative equilibrium
Reservation Price
Joint Venture
Oligopoly
24. A strategy whereby a player randomizes over two or more available actions in order to keep rivals from being able to predict his action
Peak-load pricing
First-Degree Price Discrimination (Perfect)
Four-firm concentration ratio
Mixed (randomized) strategy
25. A situation in which all decision makers know the payoff table - and they believe all other decision makers also know the payoff table
Transfer pricing
Common knowledge
Perfect Competitor Characteristics
Natural Monopoly (local phone or electric company)
26. Game in which each player makes decisions without knowledge of the other player's decisions
Cournot equilibrium
Trigger strategy
Simultaneous-move game
Minimum efficient scale (full capacity)
27. An equilibrium in a game in which players cooperate to increase their mutual payoff
First-Degree Price Discrimination (Perfect)
Horizontal Merger/Integration
Imperfect competition
Cooperative equilibrium
28. In game theory - benefit obtained by party that moves first in a sequential game
Subgame perfect equilibrium
Horizontal Merger/Integration
First-mover advantage
Vertical Merger
29. The price of a product that results in the most efficient allocation of an economy's resources and that is equal to the marginal cost of the product
Socially optimal price
Duopoly
Prisoner's dilemma
Normal-form game
30. Different units of a product are sold at different prices. Examples are buying in bulk - or - commodity-bundling
Brand Multiplication
Perfect Competition (characteristics)
Second-Degree Price Discrimination
Bargaining Power of Suppliers
31. The competition that domestic firms encounter from the products and services of foreign producers
Limit pricing
Subgame perfect equilibrium
Indefinitely repeated game
Import competition
32. When firms limit production and raise prices in a way that raises each others' profits - even though they have not made any formal agreement
Price discrimination
Tacit collusion
Differentiated oligopoly
Rent-seeking behavior
33. An industry where (1) there are few firms serving many customers; (2) firms produce differentiated products; (3) each firm believes rivals will respond to price reductions but will not follow price increases; and (4) barriers to entry exist
Mutual Interdependence
Joint Venture
Sweezy oligopoly
Common knowledge
34. Takes Place inside the Mind of the consumer
Product Differentiation
Interdependence
Normal-form game
Import competition
35. When each firm has an incentive to cheat - but both are worse off if both cheat -- illustrates why cooperation is difficult to maintain even when it is mutually beneficial to do so
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36. Sets the price at the highest level that is consistent with keeping the potential entrant out. -The strategy of reducing the price to deter entry
Mutual interdependence
Monopoly (characteristics)
Limit pricing
Stackelberg oligopoly
37. Produce identical products
Perfect Competitor Characteristics
Monopoly (characteristics)
Mixed (randomized) strategy
Market
38. Using advertising and other means to try to increase a firm's sales
Non-price competition
Conglomerate Merger
Dominant firm oligopoly
Cooperative equilibrium
39. In game theory - a statement of harmful intent by one party that the other party views as believable-- "if you do this - we will do that"
Randomized pricing
Competitive market
Repeated game
Credible threat
40. Pricing strategy in which a firm optimally sets the internal price at which an upstream division wells an input to a downstream division
Double marginalization
Business strategy
Transfer pricing
Examples of Monopolistic Competition
41. A strategy or action that always provides the best outcome no matter what decisions rivals make
Two-part Tariff Method of Pricing
Open Collusion
Dominant strategy
Payoff matrix
42. Set marginal cost for the cartel equal to marginal revenue for the cartel; -cartel's marginal cost curve is the horizontal sum of the MC curves of the two firms; -Marginal revenue curve is like that of a monopoly
Commodity bundling
Finding profit for oligopoly games
Disappearing invisible hand
What is game?
43. A measure of the difference between price and marginal cost as a fraction of the product's price. L=(P-MC)/P - refactoring gives: P=MC(1/(1-L)) - which gives us the "1/(1-L)" markup factor
Monopoly (characteristics)
Inter-industry competition
Sequential game
Lerner index
44. A market in which: (1) all have access to the same technology; (2) consumers respond quickly to price changes; (3) existing firms cannot respond quickly to entry by lowering their prices; and (4) there are no sunk costs
Price matching
Minimum efficient scale (full capacity)
Contestable market
Maximizing profit in Oligopoly games
45. Price of a product that enables its producer to obtain a normal profit & that is equal to the ATC of producing it
Fair return price
Inter-industry competition
Minimum efficient scale (full capacity)
Mixed (randomized) strategy
46. A situation in which no one wants to change his or her behavior
Equilibrium
Vertical Merger
Conglomerate Merger
Payoff
47. Pricing strategy in which consumers are charged a fixed fee for the right to purchase a product - plus a per-unit charge for each unit purchased
Import competition
Simultaneous decision games
Rothschild index
Two-part pricing
48. Operates like the alleged Mafia. Region division of the market among the firms in the industry
Limit pricing
Rothschild index
Open Collusion
The Threat from Potential Entrants Firms
49. The situation when a firm's long-run average costs fall as it increases output
Economies of scale
Reservation Price
Non-cooperative equilibrium
Herfindahl-Hirschman index (HHI)
50. A representation of a game indicating the players - their possible strategies - and the payoffs resulting from alternative strategies
Secure strategy
Normal-form game
Network effects
Imperfect competition