Obstacles to entering a specific market
Barriers to entry are the obstacles or hindrances that make it difficult for new companies to enter a given market. These may include technology challenges, government regulations, patents, start-up costs, or education and licensing requirements.
American economist Joe S. Bain gave the definition of barriers to entry as “an advantage of established sellers in an industry over potential entrant sellers, which is reflected in the extent to which established sellers can persistently raise their prices above competitive levels without attracting new entrants to enter the industry.” Another American economist, George J. Stigler, defined a barrier to entry as, “a cost of producing that must be borne by a firm which seeks to enter an industry but is not borne by firms already in the industry.”
A primary barrier to entry is the cost that constitutes an economic barrier to entry on its own. An ancillary barrier to entry refers to the cost that does not include a barrier to entry by itself but reinforces other barriers to entry if they are present.
An antitrust barrier to entry is the cost that delays entry and thereby reduces social welfare relative to immediate and costly entry. All barriers to entry are antitrust barriers to entry, but the converse is not true.
There are two types of barriers:
Type of market structure | Level of barriers to entry |
---|---|
Perfect competition | Zero barriers to entry |
Monopolistic competition | Medium barriers to entry |
Oligopoly | High barriers to entry |
Monopoly | Very high to absolute barriers to entry |
Barriers to entry generally operate on the principle of asymmetry, where different firms have different strategies, assets, capabilities, access, etc. Barriers become dysfunctional when they are so high that incumbents can keep out virtually all competitors, giving rise to monopoly or oligopoly.
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