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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. 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
Bargaining Power of Suppliers
Joint Venture
Examples of Monopolistic Competition
Two-part pricing
2. A simpler way to operationalize first-degree price discrimination
Conglomerate Merger
Price war
Two-part Tariff Method of Pricing
Imperfect competition
3. Takes Place inside the Mind of the consumer
Trigger strategy
Simultaneous-move game
Product Differentiation
Implicit Collusion
4. Where a firm can charge different groups of consumers different prices for the same product. Example: student or senior discounts
Monopolistic Characteristics:
Competitive market
Second-Degree Price Discrimination
Third-degree price discrimination
5. A strategy in which a firm advertises a price and a promise to match any lower prices offered by a competitor
Pure monopoly
Business strategy
Ownership of a Key Input
Price matching
6. An oligopoly in which the sales of the leading (top four) firms are distributed unevenly among them
Merger
Fair return price
Unbalanced Oligopoly
Prisoner's dilemma
7. When the decisions of two or more firms significantly affect each others' profits
Duopoly
Interdependence
Unbalanced Oligopoly
Perfect Competitor Characteristics
8. The practice of bundling several different products together and selling them at a single "bundle" price
Price matching
Commodity bundling
Double marginalization
No cooperative equilibrium
9. Anything that keeps new firms from entering an industry in which firms are earning economic profits (e.g. Ownership of a Key Input - Capital - Patents - Economies of scale)
Second-Degree Price Discrimination
Mutual Interdependence
Transfer pricing
Barrier to entry
10. A merger between two firms in the same industry. Example: 2004 K-Mart merged with Sears
Horizontal Merger/Integration
Cutthroat Competition
Basis for Product Differentiation
Import competition
11. A measure of the sensitivity to price of a product group as a whole relative to the sensitivity of the quantity demanded of a single firm to a change in its price. R=Et/Ef
Rothschild index
Non-rivalrous consumption
Collusion
One-shot game
12. Sellers can identify different types of customers and offer each a different price. Examples are special prices for students or the elderly
Perfect Competition Short Run Supply
Repeated game
Third-Degree Price Discrimination
Limit pricing
13. An equilibrium in a game in which players do not cooperate but pursue their own self-interest
Cheating
Examples of Monopolistic Competition
No cooperative equilibrium
Strategic behavior
14. When something can be consumed without reducing the benefits available for subsequent consumption; can be consumed without supporting rivalry between consumers
Differentiated oligopoly
Conglomerate Merger
Non-rivalrous consumption
Sequential game
15. Operates like the alleged Mafia. Region division of the market among the firms in the industry
Bargaining Power of Suppliers
Joint Venture
Open Collusion
Bertrand oligopoly
16. Keeps the price just where it is to maximize profit
Cutthroat Competition
Interdependence
Oligopoly
Barrier to entry
17. A firm whose price decisions are tacitly accepted and followed by others in the industry
Implicit Collusion
Third-degree price discrimination
Price Leadership
High Price Elasticity
18. Industry in which (1) there are few firms serving many customers; (2) firms produce either differentiated or homogenous products; (3) a single (leader) firm chooses an output quantity before their rivals select their outputs; (4) all other (follower)
Subgame perfect equilibrium
Bargaining Power of Suppliers
High Price Elasticity
Stackelberg oligopoly
19. 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
Limit pricing
Strategic behavior
Two-part pricing
Third-degree price discrimination
20. When firms make decisions that make every firm better off than in a noncooperative Nash equilibrium
Third-degree price discrimination
Cutthroat Competition
Cooperation
Perfect Competition Barriers to Entry
21. All firms and individuals willing and able to buy or sell a particular product
Market
Non-cooperative equilibrium
Network effects
First-Degree Price Discrimination (Perfect)
22. An oligopoly in which the firms produce a differentiated product
Double marginalization
Network effects
Differentiated oligopoly
Prisoners' dilemma
23. A few firms produce most market output - Products may or may not be differentiated - Effective entry barriers protect firm profitability - Firm interdependence requires strategic thinking
Sequential game
Dominant strategy
Homogenous oligopoly
Oligopoly
24. An agreement among firms in a market about quantities to produce or prices to charge in attempts to limit competition
Collusion
First-Degree Price Discrimination (Perfect)
Market
Monopolistic Competition
25. If buyers have enough bargaining power - they can insist on lower prices - higher-quality products - or additional services
Indefinitely repeated game
Second-Degree Price Discrimination
Lerner index
Bargaining Power of Buyers
26. A situation in which no one wants to change his or her behavior
Equilibrium
Rent-seeking behavior
The Threat from Potential Entrants Firms
Business strategy
27. A game that is played over and over again forever and in which players receive payoffs during each play of the game
Simultaneous-move game
Monopolistic Competition
Block pricing
Indefinitely repeated game
28. Using advertising and other means to try to increase a firm's sales
Limit price
Conglomerate Merger
Payoff
Non-price competition
29. Game in which each player makes decisions without knowledge of the other player's decisions
Simultaneous-move game
What is game?
Collusion
Perfect Competition Long Run Supply
30. Identical or substitutable
Empty threat
Undifferentiated
Market
Vertical Merger
31. First firm to set its output (Stackelberg's model)
Leader
No cooperative equilibrium
What is game?
Limit pricing
32. 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
Primary Sources of Monopolistic Power
Credible threat
Homogenous oligopoly
33. Toothpaste - shampoo - restaurants - banks
Network effects
Rothschild index
Examples of Monopolistic Competition
Strategy
34. Marginal cost curve above average variable cost - P* = SRMC
Common knowledge
Simultaneous-move game
Perfect Competition Short Run Supply
Perfect Competition Long Run Supply
35. A merger of firms in unrelated industries. Example: If Purina Dow Chow merged with Pampers Diaper Company
Second-Degree Price Discrimination
Conglomerate Merger
Non-cooperative equilibrium
Non-cooperative behavior
36. A representation of a game that summarizes the players - the information available to them at each stage - the strategies available to them - the sequence of moves - and the payoffs resulting from alternative strategies
Extensive-form game
Collusion
Covert Collusion
Limit pricing
37. 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 equilibrium
Peak-load pricing
Third-Degree Price Discrimination
Herfindahl-Hirschman index (HHI)
38. Revenue-Costs
Differentiated oligopoly
Simultaneous decision games
Profit
Bargaining Power of Buyers
39. An attempt by a firm to convince buyers that its product is different from the products of other firms in the industry
Examples of Monopolistic Competition
Sequential game
Product differentiation
Two-part Tariff Method of Pricing
40. Produce identical products
Trigger strategy
Perfect Competitor Characteristics
Price discrimination
Disappearing invisible hand
41. Single firm is sole producer of a product for which there are no close substitutes
Prisoner's dilemma
Third-Degree Price Discrimination
Dominant strategy
Pure monopoly
42. A condition describing a set of strategies that constitutes a Nash equilibrium and allows no player to improve their own payoff at any stage of the game by changing strategies
Subgame perfect equilibrium
Prisoner's dilemma
Rothschild index
Payoff table
43. A table showing - for every possible combination of decisions players can make - the outcomes or "payoffs" for each of the players in each decision combination
Payoff table
Lerner index
Price war
Bargaining Power of Suppliers
44. A table that shows the payoffs for every possible action by each player for every possible action by the other player
Price Leadership
Payoff matrix
Price war
Covert Collusion
45. A pricing strategy in which profits gained from the sale of one product are used to subsidize sales of a related product
Patent
Economies of scale
Cross-subsidy pricing
Marginal Revenue
46. Price Sensitive
Perfect Competition Short Run Supply
High Price Elasticity
Non-cooperative equilibrium
Secure strategy
47. When an upstream divisions leverages "monopoly like" power to charge higher marginal cost to a downstream division - resulting in failure of the firm to optimize profits based on the wrong quantity decision at the firms level
Minimum efficient scale (full capacity)
Double marginalization
Dansby-Willig performance index
Undifferentiated
48. 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
Limit pricing
Sweezy oligopoly
Perfect Competitor Characteristics
Price Leadership
49. The actions by persons - firms - or unions to gain special benefits from government at taxpayer's or someone else's expense
Competitive market
Payoff table
Import competition
Rent-seeking behavior
50. In game theory - game where parties make their moves in turn - one party making the first move followed by the other
Perfect Competition (characteristics)
Cutthroat Competition
Sequential game
Perfect Competition Short Run Supply