pricing of $ 872‚000 + Digitex won’t be considered since it is highly technically inferior to Computron‚ since they want dependable item + Reducing price will discourage Ruhr entering specialized product segment in future‚ hence reducing competition - Will not get 33 1/3% mark up on cost‚ whereas gets a low 5% markup cost and makes a net loss of -7% - Reduces overall profit only to 6%‚ which is the Computron’s current profit that the management wants to increase . - In case Computron Inc
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2012 Ad. Biology‚ Period G Interspecific and Intraspecific Plant Competition Abstract A study was conducted to address the problem of interspecific and intraspecific competition among wheat and mustard plants. It was hypothesized that increasing the plant density‚ and therefore increasing intraspecific competition‚ would negatively impact the plant biomass. It was also hypothesized that interspecific competition would have a stronger negative effect on the plant biomasses. This was tested
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A Case Study In Perfect Competition: The U.S. Bicycle Industry Submitted by Jay on Sun‚ 2006-07-16 22:27. I had an epiphany‚ as in a sudden insight into reality‚ in May at a meeting where a long time friend in the industry offered the opinion that the U.S. bicycle industry is in a classic state of perfect competition. My immediate response was "...that sounds like a good thing!" My friend‚ who went back to graduate school after working in a bike shop‚ for a major component manufacturer and prominent
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Imperfect Competition In a perfectly competitive market—a market in which there is many buyers and sellers‚ none of whom represents a large part of the market—firms are price takers. That is‚ they are sellers of products who believe they can sell as much as they like at the current price but cannot influence the price they receive for their product. For example‚ a wheat farmer can sell as much wheat as she likes without worrying that if she tries to sell more wheat‚ she will depress the market
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Because of the vastness of the variety of products produced by Procter and Gamble‚ they have several different competitors‚ although of course these competitors do not compete in all the same industries. The industries that P&G compete in include food‚ personal care‚ business services‚ commercial cleaning and facilities management services‚ consumer products manufacturers‚ and cleaning products. For example‚ P&G makes Pringles‚ whose competitors are basically any chip products‚ including the local
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1a) Perfect competition describes a market structure whose assumptions are extremely strong and highly unlikely to exist in most real-time and real-world markets. In perfect competition‚ there are a large number of firms in the industry. The firms in this industry are price takers as they sell at whatever price is set by demand and supply in the industry as a whole. All the firms produce homogeneous products which are exactly identical; it is impossible to distinguish between a good produced in one
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Industrial Organization 19: 37–48‚ 2001. © 2001 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in the Netherlands. 37 Is Competition Such a Good Thing? Static Efficiency versus Dynamic Efficiency MARK BLAUG University of Amsterdam‚ Amsterdam‚ The Netherlands Abstract. This paper addresses the rationale for antitrust legislation. It is a striking fact that the legitimacy of antitrust law has been taken for granted in the United States ever since the Sherman Act of 1890 and‚ until the advent of the so-called
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The Power of Competition Laura Walsh-Steinman Strayer University LEG 505 Dr. Drain July 29‚ 2012 The Power of Competition Introduction Part 1 of the Federal Acquisition System (FAR) states that its purpose is to: ". . . deliver on a timely basis the best value product or service to the customer‚ while maintaining the public ’s trust and fulfilling public policy objectives [FAR Part 1]." To meet that objective‚ application of the FAR System will maximize the use of commercial products
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marketplace. This means that we have competition in the market‚ which allows price to change in response to changes in supply and demand. Furthermore‚ for almost every product there are substitutes‚ so if one product becomes too expensive‚ a buyer can choose a cheaper substitute instead. In a market with many buyers and sellers‚ both the consumer and the supplier have equal ability to influence price. In some industries‚ there are no substitutes and there is no competition. In a market that has only one
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Questions for Bitter Competition Case 1) As the Holland Sweetener Company‚ how do you expect NutraSweet to respond to your entering the European and Canadian markets? Is it more likely to be an accommodating response (normal competition) or aggressive response (price war)? In considering your response‚ you should list both the reasons for NutraSweet to adopt an accommodating response (normal competition) AND an aggressive response (price war). * Nutra Sweet is already well established and
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