OPEC Oligopoly Chelsea Weber OPEC Oligopoly Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) has been called many names; monopoly‚ oligopoly‚ cartel‚ or all of the above. Reading further will give information on to why OPEC is an oligopoly. To give you a brief background on OPEC‚ explain to you how OPEC acts like a cartel and of why OPEC is a successful oligopoly and cartel. Is OPEC a successful oligopoly? Some people refer to OPEC as a cartel which is another name for oligopoly. Some people
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BAJORIA | 63 | DEVANSH DOSHI | 66 | POOJA JAIN | 90 | AKSHALI SHAH | 113 | SONIKA GAMBHIR | 114 | RESHMA LALA | 115 | WHAT DOES OPEC STAND FOR? The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) was created in 1960 to unify and protect the interests of oil-producing countries. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is a group of twelve states made up of Iran‚ Iraq‚ Kuwait‚ Qatar‚ Saudi Arabia‚ the United Arab Emirates‚ Libya‚ Algeria‚ Nigeria‚ Angola
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Definition and Introduction to OPEC OPEC‚ The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries‚ is a name that has become synonymous with the worldwide petroleum market. But what does it do‚ who is involved and how important is OPEC to our day-to-day lives? This article aims to answer these basic questions in a clear and concise fashion. OPEC is a permanent organisation of 12 countries which are world-leaders in oil production. The primary aim of OPEC is to unify petroleum policies between its
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“OPEC As a CARTEL” There are two kinds of extreme market structure and they are perfect competition and imperfect competition. In a perfectly competitive market there are many numbers of sellers and many numbers of buyers selling and buying homogeneous products‚ therefore there is very little impact of a single buyer or seller changing the price of his/her product. In an imperfect competitive market there are few sellers and these sellers have some control over the prices and output of the
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BE – Group Assignment Group No – 15 Centre – Thane OPEC Case Study Course - IIFT EPGDIB ( Vsat) 2009 Participants :1) Dinesh Jhamnani 3) Neelesh Naik 5) Koshy John 2) Anup Nair 4) Prashant Lohade 6) Smita Meshram What is OPEC? The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is a permanent intergovernmental organization of 12 oil-exporting developing nations that coordinates and unifies the petroleum policies of its Member Countries. It was founded at a meeting held on 10–14 September
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Oligopoly is a market structure in which only a few sellers offer similar or identical products. It is an intermediate form of imperfect competition. OPEC is an epitome of Oligopoly. Features of Oligopoly: • Non Price Competition • Interdependent decision making • Entry Barriers If organizations behave in cooperative mode to mitigate the competitions amongst themselves it is called Collusion. When two or more organizations agree to set their outputs or prices to maintain monopoly it is called
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themselves‚ which creates an oligopoly. Oligopoly’s are known for having kinked demand curves meaning that when left to the free market competitors will keep undercutting each other until neither are making the large revenue’s they projected when they entered. It is at this point that OPEC‚ the organization for petroleum exporting countries steps in. Using strategy following game theory they control supply so that they can maintain prices at a level where member countries of OPEC can increase their individual
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OPEC Presented By Ashok‚ Vinod and Prashant AGENDA Introduction to OPEC OPEC Important Events Present and Future Feedback Introduction What is OPEC? The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is a permanent‚ intergovernmental Organization‚ created at the Baghdad Conference on September 10–14‚ 1960‚ by Iran‚ Iraq‚ Kuwait‚ Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. Members Qatar (1961) Indonesia (1962) – suspended from January 2009 Libya (1962) United Arab Emirates (1967)
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Overview of OPEC Is a permanent‚ intergovernmental Organization‚ created at the Baghdad Conference on September‚ 1960. Founder Members: Later joined Members •Iran •Iraq •Kuwait •Saudi Arabia •Venezuela •Qatar (1961) •Indonesia (1962) – suspended membership 01/2009 •Libya (1962) •United Arab Emirates (1967) •Algeria (1969) •Nigeria (1971) •Ecuador (1973) – suspended membership 1992-2007 •Angola (2007) •Gabon (1975–1994) Objectives of Opec • OPEC’s objective is to co-ordinate and unify petroleum
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The Economic Structure of OPEC For: Professor John Zink BUS 610-0703B Economics for the Global Manager By: Maria A. Journiette August 31‚ 2007 Many companies operate under a monopoly which gives them an edge or a corner on the market. In this discussion we will focus on the differences between a monopoly‚ oligopoly‚ and a cartel. We will also look at what game theory is and its affect on monopolies and cartels and the welfare affect of each of the above mentioned. A monopoly is defined
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