Chapter 21: Oligopolies and Imperfectly Competitive Markets
Core idea
The textbook spectrum — perfect competition on one end, monopoly on the other — is mostly aspirational. The industries you actually deal with every day (airlines, cell carriers, banks, automakers, streaming services, big-box retailers) sit in the murky middle as oligopolies: a handful of large firms with enough market share that their decisions move prices. The defining feature isn’t size by itself. It’s interdependence — every major player must factor in how the others will respond before changing a price or launching a product. Oligopoly is what competition tends to mature into once scale, mergers, and barriers to entry have done their work.
Authors’ framing: As competition decreases, prices rise, efficiency falls, and consumers start to actively dislike the companies they’re stuck with. The industries you love to hate are almost always oligopolies.
Why it matters
Most public anger at “corporate America” is really anger at oligopoly. Knowing this changes what you ask of policy, regulators, and your own buying decisions.
Where market power actually lives
Perfectly competitive markets (commodity wheat, basic produce) feel quaint because so few of them remain. Real consumer-facing markets — airlines, ISPs, mobile carriers, beer, soft drinks, hospitals — are oligopolies. The complaints you hear about price hikes, hidden fees, and indifferent service map almost perfectly onto the most concentrated industries. Once you can name the structure, you stop blaming the people inside it and start looking at the structure itself.
What regulators are actually doing during a merger
When the FTC or DOJ blocks a merger, the headline says “antitrust.” The actual analysis is concentration math: how much would this deal shrink the number of meaningful competitors? Tools like the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index and the four-firm concentration ratio convert that question into a number a court can argue about. Without those tools, “this merger is bad for consumers” is an opinion. With them, it’s evidence.
The boundary problem
Whether a market counts as oligopolistic depends on how you define the market. A local newspaper might have 100% of local print — but only 5% of “local media” once you include radio, TV, blogs, and social. Companies fighting antitrust action almost always argue for the broadest possible market definition; regulators argue for the narrowest. This is not pedantry — it’s where most antitrust cases are actually won and lost.
Key takeaways
Key takeaways
- Oligopoly = a small number of large producers dominate a market, with high barriers to entry and pricing power that perfectly competitive firms lack.
- The defining behavioral feature is interdependence: each firm's pricing and output decisions depend on what the others will do in response.
- Oligopolies are usually the mature form of a previously competitive market — consolidation and economies of scale weed out small players over time.
- Regulators measure market concentration with the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) and concentration ratios; very high values can block mergers under antitrust law.
- A four-firm concentration ratio near 0% suggests perfect competition; 100% one-firm concentration is monopoly. Most real markets sit between 40% and 90%.
- How you define an industry shapes the answer. Streaming, news, and retail look very different at narrow vs. broad market definitions.
- Loss of competition predictably means higher prices, less innovation, and worse customer service — the bill is paid by consumers, not the firms.
Mental model — the market structure spectrum
Read it as: Markets sit on a spectrum from many small sellers with no pricing power (green, left) to a single seller with total pricing power (red, right). Oligopoly is the second-most-concentrated structure — few enough firms that they have to watch each other, but more than one. The yellow color is intentional: oligopoly is the “caution zone” where competition is real but limited.
Mental model — how a competitive market becomes an oligopoly
Practical application
Read concentration math before reading the press release
Spot the interdependence signal
The behavioral tell of oligopoly is simultaneous, parallel pricing. When every airline raises bag fees within two weeks, or every cell carrier launches a “5G” plan within the same quarter, you are watching firms react to each other rather than to costs. This isn’t proof of collusion (chapter 22) — it’s just what interdependent firms naturally do. It’s why oligopolistic prices move together even without any agreement.
Example: counting carriers in your wallet
Pull out your phone and your wallet. How many serious choices do you have for each service?
- Cellular: Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile. Three. (Most “MVNOs” — Mint, Cricket, Visible — actually ride on those three networks.)
- Credit card networks: Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Discover. Four, but two dominate.
- Operating system on your phone: iOS or Android. Two.
- Air travel between most US city pairs: typically 2–3 nonstop options.
- Home broadband: in most American zip codes, 1–2 wired providers.
- Search: Google has roughly 90% share.
Almost every product or service you use daily is supplied by a market with single-digit numbers of meaningful competitors. The textbook image of “thousands of sellers competing on price” describes commodity agriculture, not the modern consumer economy. Once you see this, the constant frustration of “why does everything cost more and feel worse?” stops being mysterious — it’s the predicted outcome of mature oligopoly.
Caveats
Related lessons
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