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In Bertrand competition with firms producing homogeneous products and competing by setting prices, prices will get driven down to marginal cost levels. If one firm has a cost advantage (lower average cost), it will charge a price slightly lower than the marginal cost of the other firm, and capture the entire market.
Now, prices 0 and 1 are obviously unfeasible, because both firms make negative profits; they'd rather not produce anything at all. The lowest price firm 1 can bear is 2.5 and the lowest price firm 2 can bear is 1.5. Since only integral prices are allowed, p1 = 3 and p2 = 2, 3 are the only interesting cases. Now, if you construct a pay-off matrix, you'll find that firm 2 is indifferent between choosing p2 = 2 and p2 = 3, earning a profit of 3/2 in either case.
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