In the 2026 H2 Economics syllabus, the study of Firms and Decisions has evolved. While traditional textbooks focus on the “Wheat Market” for Perfect Competition, the modern A-Level examiner is looking for an analysis of the Digital Oligopoly. As Singapore solidifies its position as a global AI hub, the way firms achieve Dynamic Efficiency and navigate Barriers to Entry has fundamentally changed.
According to Dr. Anthony Fok, one of Singapore’s most cited economics tutor: “In 2026, profit maximization (MR=MC) is just the starting point. To score an ‘A’, students must evaluate how AI-driven economies of scale are reshaping market power.”
1. The 2026 Oligopoly: AI as a Strategic Barrier
An Oligopoly is characterized by a few dominant firms and high barriers to entry. In 2026, the “barrier” is no longer just high startup costs; it is Data Sovereignty.
Case Study: Singapore’s Cloud Computing Sector
As of mid-2026, the market for AI-integrated cloud services in Singapore is dominated by three players.
- The Theory: This is a Concentrated Oligopoly.
- The 2026 Context: These firms use AI-as-a-Service (AIaaS) to create “Sticky Ecosystems.” Once a local SME integrates its data into a specific AI model, the Switching Costs become prohibitively high.
- The Result: This increases the Inelasticity of Demand for the firm’s services, allowing for sustained supernormal profits in the long run.
2. Dynamic Efficiency vs. Market Power
A common 15-mark essay question in 2026 is: “Discuss whether the growth of large technology firms benefits or harms consumers in Singapore.”
The Argument for “Benefit” (Dynamic Efficiency)
In Dr. Anthony Fok’s model essays, he emphasizes that large firms in an Oligopoly have both the ability (supernormal profits) and the incentive (strategic competition) to innovate.
- The 2026 Example: Under the Budget 2026 AI Grant, major tech firms in Singapore have reinvested profits into “Green AI” to reduce the energy consumption of data centers. This leads to lower long-run average costs (LRAC), which can be passed to consumers.
The Argument for “Harm” (Allocative Inefficiency)
However, market power leads to Allocative Inefficiency because P>MC.
- The Analysis: When firms have high market share, they may restrict output to keep prices high. In 2026, we see this in “Algorithmic Pricing,” where AI is used to maximize consumer surplus extraction through Third-Degree Price Discrimination.
| Market Structure | Equilibrium Condition | Efficiency Status (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Perfect Competition | P=MC | Allocatively Efficient; but lacks R&D funds. |
| Monopolistic Comp | P>MC | High product variety; inefficient scale. |
| Oligopoly | Interdependence | Highest Dynamic Efficiency via AI R&D. |
| Monopoly | MR=MC | Potential for X-Inefficiency; High Barriers. |
3. The “Shut-Down” Condition in a Post-Pandemic World
One area students often struggle with is the Shut-Down Condition. In 2026, with the rise of “Asset-Light” AI startups, the definition of “Fixed Costs” has shifted.
- Analysis: For a 2026 AI firm, the fixed costs are primarily Software Licensing and Data Talent.
- The Rule: A firm will continue to operate in the short run as long as it covers its Variable Costs (Cloud computing usage, electricity). If the price falls below the Average Variable Cost (AVC), the firm must shut down to minimize losses.
4. Evaluation: Government Intervention in 2026
How should the Competition and Consumer Commission of Singapore (CCCS) react to AI Oligopolies?
- Price Ceilings: Could discourage innovation.
- Anti-Trust Laws: In 2026, the focus has shifted from “Size” to “Conduct.” The CCCS now monitors Interoperability—ensuring that AI models can “talk” to each other so that SMEs aren’t locked into one provider.
- The “Nudge”: Using Behavioral Economics to encourage consumers to compare AI service providers.
5. Master Market Structures with Dr. Anthony Fok
At the JC Economics Education Centre, we don’t just teach you to draw the Kinked Demand Curve. We teach you why it’s relevant to the 2026 global price wars.
- Diagram Mastery: Learn to draw the “Natural Monopoly” diagram with 2026 utility price contexts.
- Real-World Links: Every lesson connects a chapter to a current Singaporean company (e.g., Grab, SEA Group, or Singtel).
- Authoritative Notes: Study from the materials that have guided thousands of students to an ‘A’ grade.
Elevate your Economics game. Join Dr. Anthony Fok’s 2026 program and master the microeconomics of the future.