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What is a Duopoly?

A Duopoly is a market condition where the total market of a product or service or most of the market is controlled by only two corporations. It is the very basic form of oligopoly. 

What Causes a Duopoly? 

A duopoly may arise through competition, anti-competitive practices, or merger/acquisition. In this united states, anti-competitive activities and mergers/acquisitions that reduce competition to the level of duopoly is illegal. 

What is the Effect of a Duopoly?

At times these two corporations collude on prices or output when exerting market control. A duopoly has the same impact as a monopoly. The customers need to pay a higher price in the absence of a truly competitive market. 

Duopoly achieved through anti-competitive activity is illegal in the U.S.

Duopoly is not an ideal market situation as it poses threat to the concept of free market economy.

Related Topics

  • Market Structure
  • Perfect Competition
  • Bidding War
  • Complements & Substitutes
  • Substitution Effect
  • Imperfect Competition
  • Market Power
  • Price Takers
  • Price Makers 
  • Perfect Competition and Decision Making
  • X-Efficiency
  • Captive Market
  • Contestable Market Theory
  • Highest Profit Point in a Perfectly Competitive Market
  • Marginal Revenue
  • Using Marginal Revenue and Marginal Costs to Maximize Profit
  • Marginal Revenue Curve
  • Profit Margin and Average Total Cost
  • Break Even Point – Cost Curve
  • Shutdown Point – Cost Curve
  • Short-Run Decisions Based Upon Costs in a Perfectly Competitive Market
  • Marginal Costs and the Supply Curve for a Perfectively Competitive Firm
  • Long-Run Average Supply (LRAS)
  • Decisions to Enter or Exit a Market in the Long Run
  • Long-Run Equilibrium in a Perfectly Competitive Market
  • Constant, Increasing, and Decreasing Cost Industries
  • Productive and Allocative Efficiency in Perfectly Competitive Markets
  • Market Efficiency
  • Market Inefficiency
  • Pareto Efficiency
  • Market Failure 
  • Search Theory
  • Monopoly
  • Natural Monopoly
  • Legal Monopoly
  • Bilateral Monopoly
  • Promoting Innovation through Intellectual Property
  • Predatory Pricing
  • How Monopolists Set Price with the Demand Curve
  • Total Cost and Total Revenue for a Monopolist
  • Marginal Revenue and Marginal Cost for a Monopolist
  • Inefficiency of Monopoly
  • Perfectly Competitive Market
  • Monopolistic Competition
  • Duopoly
  • Oligopoly
  • Differentiated Products
  • Perceived Demand for a Monopolistic Competitor
  • Monopolistic Competitors Choose Price and Quantity
  • Monopolistic Competitors and Entry
  • Monopolistic Competition and Efficiency
  • Cartel (Economics)
  • Game Theory
  • Traveler’s Dilemma
  • Prisoner’s Dilemma
  • Iterated Prisoner’s Dilemma
  • Nash Equilibrium
  • Diner’s Dilemma
  • Trembling Hand Perfect Equilibrium
  • Gambler’s Fallacy
  • Arrows Impossibility Theorem
  • Backward Induction
  • Tournament Theory
  • Oligopoly and the Prisoner’s Dilemma
  • Forcing Cooperation in a Prisoner’s Dilemma
  • Cooperation and the Kinked Demand Curve
  • Corporate Merger or Acquisition
  • Antitrust Laws
  • Herfindahl-Hirschman Index
  • Concentration Ratio
  • Other Approaches to Measuring Monopoly Power in an Industry
  • Restrictive Practices under Antitrust Law
  • Natural Monopoly
  • Cost-Plus Regulation
  • Price Cap Regulation
  • Regulatory Capture