Cournot competition

Cournot competition is an economics model used to describe industry structure. It so called after Antoine Augustin Cournot (1801-1877) after he observed competition in a spring water duopoly. It has the following features:

Price is a commonly known decreasing function of total output. All firms know N and take the output of the others as given. Each firm has a cost function ci(qi) (cost per unit multiply quantity). Normally the cost functions are treated as common knowledge. The cost functions are normally the same for all firms. The market price is set at a level such that demand equals the total quantity produced by both firms.

Contents

Graphically finding the Cournot duopoly equilibrium

p1 = firm 1 price, p2 = firm 2 price
q1 = firm 1 quantity, q2 = firm 2 quantity
c = marginal cost (assumed to be constant)

Equilibrium prices will be:

p1 = p2 = P(q1+q2)

This implies that firm i’s profit is given by \Pi\ i = qi(P(q1+q2)-c)

Missing image
Economics_cournot_diag1.png
Image:economics_cournot_diag1.png

Missing image
Economics_cournot_diag2.png
Image:economics_cournot_diag2.png

Missing image
Economics_cournot_diag3.png
Image:economics_cournot_diag3.png

Missing image
Economics_cournot_diag4.png
Image:economics_cournot_diag4.png

Calculating the equilibrium

In very general terms, let the price function for the (duopoly) industry be P(q1 + q2) and firm i have the cost structure Ci(qi). To calculate the Nash equilibrium, the best response functions of the firms must first be calculated.

The profit of firm i is revenue less cost. Revenue is the product of price and quantity and cost is given by the firm's cost structure, so profit is (as described above): \Pi\ i = P(q_1+q_2).q_i - C_i(q_i). The best response is to find the value of qi that maximises \Pi\ i given qj, with i \ne \ j, i.e. given some output of the opponent firm, the output that maximises profit is found. Hence, the maximum of \Pi\ i with respect to qi is to be found. First derive \Pi\ i with respect to qi:

\frac{\partial \Pi\ i }{\partial q_i} = \frac{\partial P(q_1+q_2) }{\partial q_i}.qi + P(q1+q2) - \frac{\partial C_i (q_i)}{\partial q_i}

Setting this to zero for maximisation:

\frac{\partial \Pi\ i }{\partial q_i} = \frac{\partial P(q_1+q_2) }{\partial q_i}.qi + P(q1+q2) - \frac{\partial C_i (q_i)}{\partial q_i}=0

The values of qi that satisfy this equation are the best responses. The Nash equilibria are where both q1 and q2 are best responses given those values of q1 and q2.

An example

Suppose the industry has the following price structure: P(q1 + q2) = ab(q1 + q2) The profit of firm i (with cost structure Ci(qi) such that \frac{\partial ^2C_i (q_i)}{\partial q_i^2}=0 and \frac{\partial C_i (q_i)}{\partial q_j}=0, j \ne \ i for ease of computation) is:

\Pi\ i = \bigg(a - b(q_1+q_2)\bigg).q_i - \partial C_i(q_i)

The maximisation problem resolves to (from the general case):

\frac{\partial \bigg(a - b(q_1+q_2)\bigg) }{\partial q_i}.qi + a - b(q_1+q_2) - \frac{\partial C_i (q_i)}{\partial q_i}=0

Without loss of generality, consider firm 1's problem:

\frac{\partial \bigg(a - b(q_1+q_2)\bigg) }{\partial q_1}.q1 + a - b(q_1+q_2) - \frac{\partial C_1 (q_1)}{\partial q_1}=0

\Rightarrow \ - bq_1 + a - b(q_1+q_2) - \frac{\partial C_1 (q_1)}{\partial q_1}=0

\Rightarrow \ q_1 = \frac{a - bq_2 - \frac{\partial C_1 (q_1)}{\partial q_1}}{2b}

By symmetry:

\Rightarrow \ q_2 = \frac{a - bq_1 - \frac{\partial C_2 (q_2)}{\partial q_2}}{2b}

These are the firms' best response functions. For any value of q2, firm 1 responds best with any value of q1 that satisfies the above. In Nash equilibria, both firms will be playing best responses so solving the above equations simultaneously. Substituting for q2 in firm 1's best response:

\ q_1 = \frac{a - b(\frac{a - bq_1 - \frac{\partial C_2 (q_2)}{\partial q_2}}{2b}) - \frac{\partial C_1 (q_1)}{\partial q_1}}{2b}

\Rightarrow \ q_1* = \frac{a + \frac{\partial C_2 (q_2)}{\partial q_2} - \frac{\partial C_1 (q_1)}{\partial q_1}}{3b}

\Rightarrow \ q_2* = \frac{a + \frac{\partial C_1 (q_1)}{\partial q_1} - \frac{\partial C_2 (q_2)}{\partial q_2}}{3b}

The Nash equilibria are all (q1 * ,q2 * ). This yields a market price of 5a/3.

Implications

Bertrand versus Cournot

See also

See also: Cournot competition, Antoine Augustin Cournot, Barriers to entry, Bertrand competition, Bertrand game, Best response, Duopoly, Economics, Equilibrium, Game theory