Examples of incumbent in the following topics:
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- Because barriers to entry protect incumbent firms and restrict competition in a market, they can contribute to distortionary prices.
- The most important barriers are economies of scale, patents, access to expensive and complex technology, and strategic actions by incumbent firms designed to discourage or destroy new entrants.
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- Health care has many inputs and a variety of incumbents, namely insurance providers, administrators, governments, and pharmaceuticals.
- With these group of incumbents in mind, it becomes quite clear why the costs are rising exponentially and are so unsustainable.
- This graph illustrates the danger of continuing down path of using the excessively high cost-structure U.S. health care incumbents have dictated in the context of spending as a % of GDP.
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- An agricultural subsidy is a government grant paid to incumbents in the industry to reduce costs and influence the supply of commodities.
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- To summarize, international trade benefits mostly all incumbents and generates substantial value for the global economy.
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- The concept of antitrust largely revolves around governmental restrictions that limit incumbents in any given industry from consolidating too much power.
- This graph illustrates the way in which monopolistic incumbents can control economic factors, ultimately creating surpluses or shortages to garner advantage.
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- Because barriers to entry protect incumbent firms and restrict competition in a market, they can distort prices.
- Customer loyalty: Large incumbent firms may have existing customers loyal to established products.
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- With union membership and political power declining, dissident leader John Sweeney, president of the Service Employees International Union, challenged incumbent Lane Kirkland for the AFL-CIO presidency in 1995 and won.
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- Perfect competition is a market where the price determined for a given good or service is not affected by external forces or competition in a way that allows incumbents (companies) to attain market influence.
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- Import Quotas: Policy makers often implement quotas in agriculture to retain more control over prices and protect domestic incumbents.
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- Market entrants have not yet achieved economies of scale, so their output simply costs so much more than the incumbent firms that market entry is difficult.