This paper analyzes the capacity choice issue under a price-setting mixed duopoly with differentiated goods, when the objective function of the private firm is its relative profit. In this paper, we show that the public firm chooses over-capacity irrespective of the degree of product differentiation and the degree of importance of the relative performance of the private firm. In contrast, we find that the difference between the output and capacity levels of the private firm strictly depends on both the degree of product differentiation and the degree of importance of its relative performance. More precisely, the private firm chooses over-capacity when the degree of importance of its relative performance is high relative to the degree of product differentiation, whereas it chooses under-capacity otherwise.
This paper reconsiders the capacity choices of a public firm that is a welfare-maximizer and a private firm that is a relative-profit-maximizer in the context of a price-setting mixed duopoly. More precisely, in this paper, taking into account that the objective function of the private firm is its relative profit, we consider the impact of the degree of importance of its relative performance on the difference between their output and their capacity levels of both the public firm and the private firm in a pricesetting mixed duopoly. The main contribution of this paper is that given the degree of product differentiation, it is shown that the difference between the output level and capacity levels of the private firm changes with the degree of importance of its relative performance.
Nishimori and Ogawa [
In this paper, we show that under the assumption that the products of the public firm and the private firm are restricted to being substitutable, the public firm sets overcapacity for any value of the degree of importance of the private firm’s relative performance. The intuition behind this result is given by the same logic as that presented in Bárcena-Ruiz and Garzón [
In contrast, in this paper, we find that the private firm chooses over-capacity when the degree of importance of its relative performance is highly relative to the degree of product differentiation, whereas the private firm chooses under-capacity otherwise. When the degree of importance of the private firm’s relative performance is high relative to the degree of product differentiation, the private firm aggressively behaves in the market in the case wherein it is a relative-profit-maximizer rather than in the case wherein it is only a profit-maximizer, implying its relatively low price level and its high output level. Consequently, although the goods of both firms are restricted to being substitutable, we show that the difference between the output and capacity levels of the private firm changes in accordance with the degree of importance of its relative performance and the degree of product differentiation. Therefore, in the context of the capacity choice in a mixed duopoly, whether the private firm chooses over-capacity or under-capacity depends not only on its strategic variable and the degree of product differentiation but also on the degree of importance of its relative performance.
The remainder of this paper is organized as follows. In Section 2, we formulate a price-setting mixed duopolistic model with the capacity choices of both the public firm and the private firm. In Section 3, we consider the difference between the output and capacity levels of both the firms using the model built in Section 2. Section 4 concludes with several remarks. Each firm’s equilibrium price level is relegated to the Appendix3.
We formulate a price-setting mixed duopolistic model where both the public firm (firm 0) and the private firm
(firm 1) can choose not only their prices but also their capacities. The basic structure of the model follows a standard product differentiation model as in Singh and Vives [
where, represents the degree of product differentiation, and q represents the numeraire good4. The above specification implies the following demand function: for the positive prices of both the firms,
We suppose that both firms adopt identical technologies represented by the cost function, where xi is the capacity level of firm i,. Following Vives [
whereas producer surplus is given by the sum of the
of both firms,.
5We assume that α > m in order to ensure the nonnegativity of all equilibrium outcomes.
Let be firm i’s relative profit
. Then, the payoff of firm 1 is given by V1, whereas the payoff of firm 0 is given by W, where W is the total social surplus (the sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus)6. Moreover, we assume that 7. Parameter β indicates the degree of the importance of the relative performance of the private firm 1.
We investigate the game with the following orders of each firm’s move. In the first stage, firms 0 and 1 simultaneously set their capacity levels. In the second stage, after both firms observe each other’s capacity level, they engage in a price-setting competition.
We solve the game by backward induction from the second stage to obtain a subgame perfect Nash equilibrium. In the second stage, firm 0 maximizes social welfare W with respect to p0, whereas firm 1 maximizes its payoff V1 with respect to p1. The first-order conditions of firms 0 and 1 are, respectively, given as
yielding
In the first stage, both firms know that their capacity choices affect their price levels in the second stage. Given Equations (1) and (2), firms 0 and 1 simultaneously and independently set their capacity levels with respect to social welfare and the relative profit of private firm 1, respectively. Thus, by solving the first-order conditions of firms 0 and 1 in the first stage, we have
yielding
Note that superscript * is used to represent the subgame perfect equilibrium market outcomes. Thus, the output levels of both firms in the equilibrium are given as follows8:
Hence, from easy calculations, we obtain the following results on the difference between the output and capacity levels of both firms:
Thus, different from the analysis of quantity-setting competition in Nakamura and Saito [
Proposition 1 Public firm 0 chooses over-capacity, , for any and. In contrast, the difference between private firm 1’s output and capacity levels strictly depends on both the degree of product differentiation and the degree of importance of its relative performance. More precisely, private firm 1 selects over-capacity, , if the degree of importance of its relative performance β is high relative to the degree of product differentiation b, whereas it selects under-capacity, , otherwise. Moreover, the area in the -plane wherein the private firm 1 selects under-
capacity becomes wider as the value of the degree of product differentiation b increases.
Propostition 1 gives that public firm 0 chooses overcapacity for any degree of product differentiation and any degree of importance of the private firm’s relative performance. The intuition behind this result is similar to that presented in Bárcena-Ruiz and Garzón [
In contrast, in Proposition 1, it is also stated that the difference between the private firm’s output and capacity levels strictly depends on both the degree of product differentiation and the degree of importance of the private firm’s relative performance, as described in
Finally, given a degree of importance of the private firm’s relative performance, when the degree of product differentiation b increases, the private firm strategically tends to choose under-capacity, since the effect of b on the difference between the private firm’s output and capacity levels is sufficiently strong. Therefore, as the degree of product differentiation b increases, it is likely that the area in the -plane wherein the difference between the private firm’s output and capacity levels is positive, becomes wider.
This paper investigated the difference between the output and capacity levels of both the public firm and the private firm in a price-setting mixed duopoly with differentiated goods, in particular when the objective function of the private firm is its relative profit. In this paper, we showed that the public firm chooses over-capacity irrespective of both the degree of product differentiation and the degree of importance of its relative performance, whereas the difference between the output and capacity levels of the private firm strictly depends on both the degree of product differentiation and the degree of importance of its relative performance.
The result on the difference between the output and capacity levels of the public firm is explained by the same intuition as that presented in the case wherein the private firm is only a profit-maximizer, while the result that the private firm strategically chooses over-capacity is explained by the effect of the degree of importance of its relative performance, which has not been taken into consideration in the existing literature in this field. More precisely, even under a product-differentiation setting in a mixed duopoly, the private firm aggressively behaves in the market when it is a relative-profit-maximizer rather than when it is only a profit-maximizer. Thus, in particular, when the degree of importance of the private firm’s relative performance is highly relative to the degree of product differentiation, the difference between its output and capacity levels can be negative11. Therefore, similar to a quantity-setting competition with differentiated goods, in a price-setting mixed duopolistic market, whether the private firm chooses over-capacity or under-capacity depends not only on the relation between both firms’ goods but also on the degree of importance of its relative performance.
where
, and