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Tariffs and imperfect international
           competition



               Game Theory

            By Eranga Kavirathna


                                      1
   Two Stage Game
       Dynamic game with lots of players and imperfect
        information.


   Imperfect information
       A player may not know exactly Who has made
        What choices when he has an opportunity to
        make a choice.




                                                          2
   There are more players in this Game.
   Each country has a
          1. government,
          2. a firm, and
          3. consumers for a firm’s output. (consumers are treated
             as passive in this game)

   So there are 4 players,
    1.   Two governments
    2.   Two firms

   The players change in the second stage of the game.




                                                                     3
   Two governments, 1 and 2, simultaneously
    choose their tariff rates, denoted by t1, t2.

   Firm 1 from country 1 and firm 2 from country
    2 produce a homogeneous product for both
    home consumption and export.




                                                    4
   After observing the tariff rates chosen by the two
    countries, firm 1 and 2 simultaneously chooses
    quantities for home consumption and for export,
    denoted by (h1, e1) and (h2, e2), respectively.
   Market price in two countries Pi(Qi)=a–Qi, for i=1, 2.
   Q1=h1+e2, Q2=h2+e1.
   Both firms have a constant marginal cost c.
   Each firm pays tariff on export to the other country.



                                                             5
How high of a tariff should each
government impose?
It depend on,

   Firms behavior (Profit maximization)

   Objective of government policy (Total
    welfare, Maximize TAX revenue, Maximize Home firm revenue
    or Max. Consumer Surplus)




                                                            6
Tariffs and imperfect international
competition

 Firm 1's play for its profit:




 Firm 2's play for its profit:




                                      7
Tariffs and imperfect international
competition
 Country 1's Gov. play for its total welfare: sum of the consumers'
 surplus enjoyed by the consumers of country 1, firm 1's profit and
 the tariff revenue


 where           .
 Country 2's Gov. play for its total welfare: sum of the consumers'
 surplus enjoyed by the consumers of country 2, firm 2's profit and
 the tariff revenue


 where            .



                                                                      8
Backward induction:
subgame between the two firms
   Here we will find the Nash equilibrium of the subgame between
   the two firms for any given pair of     .
   Firm 1 maximizes (first derivation)



   FOC:


   Firm 2 maximizes (first derivation)



   FOC:




                                                                   9
Backward induction: whole game
Both countries know that two firms' best response for any pair
Country 1 maximizes (            )


Plugging what we got into country 1's objective function




FOC:



By symmetry, we also get



                                                                 10
Backward induction:
subgame between the two firms
  Here we will find the Nash equilibrium of the subgame between the
  two firms for any given pair of      .
  Given        , a Nash equilibrium                 of the subgame
  should satisfy these equations.




  Solving these equations gives us




                                                                      11
Tariffs and imperfect international
competition
The subgame-perfect Nash equilibrium




The subgame-perfect outcome




                                       12

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Tariffs and-imperfect-international-competition

  • 1. Tariffs and imperfect international competition Game Theory By Eranga Kavirathna 1
  • 2. Two Stage Game  Dynamic game with lots of players and imperfect information.  Imperfect information  A player may not know exactly Who has made What choices when he has an opportunity to make a choice. 2
  • 3. There are more players in this Game.  Each country has a 1. government, 2. a firm, and 3. consumers for a firm’s output. (consumers are treated as passive in this game)  So there are 4 players, 1. Two governments 2. Two firms  The players change in the second stage of the game. 3
  • 4. Two governments, 1 and 2, simultaneously choose their tariff rates, denoted by t1, t2.  Firm 1 from country 1 and firm 2 from country 2 produce a homogeneous product for both home consumption and export. 4
  • 5. After observing the tariff rates chosen by the two countries, firm 1 and 2 simultaneously chooses quantities for home consumption and for export, denoted by (h1, e1) and (h2, e2), respectively.  Market price in two countries Pi(Qi)=a–Qi, for i=1, 2.  Q1=h1+e2, Q2=h2+e1.  Both firms have a constant marginal cost c.  Each firm pays tariff on export to the other country. 5
  • 6. How high of a tariff should each government impose? It depend on,  Firms behavior (Profit maximization)  Objective of government policy (Total welfare, Maximize TAX revenue, Maximize Home firm revenue or Max. Consumer Surplus) 6
  • 7. Tariffs and imperfect international competition Firm 1's play for its profit: Firm 2's play for its profit: 7
  • 8. Tariffs and imperfect international competition Country 1's Gov. play for its total welfare: sum of the consumers' surplus enjoyed by the consumers of country 1, firm 1's profit and the tariff revenue where . Country 2's Gov. play for its total welfare: sum of the consumers' surplus enjoyed by the consumers of country 2, firm 2's profit and the tariff revenue where . 8
  • 9. Backward induction: subgame between the two firms Here we will find the Nash equilibrium of the subgame between the two firms for any given pair of . Firm 1 maximizes (first derivation) FOC: Firm 2 maximizes (first derivation) FOC: 9
  • 10. Backward induction: whole game Both countries know that two firms' best response for any pair Country 1 maximizes ( ) Plugging what we got into country 1's objective function FOC: By symmetry, we also get 10
  • 11. Backward induction: subgame between the two firms Here we will find the Nash equilibrium of the subgame between the two firms for any given pair of . Given , a Nash equilibrium of the subgame should satisfy these equations. Solving these equations gives us 11
  • 12. Tariffs and imperfect international competition The subgame-perfect Nash equilibrium The subgame-perfect outcome 12

Editor's Notes

  1. Eranga Kavirathna June 12, 2003