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Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers...

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Chapter 11: Monopoly
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Page 1: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Chapter 11: Monopoly

Page 2: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Monopoly market single seller for a product with no

close substitutes barriers to entry

Page 3: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Barriers to entry economies of scale actions by firms actions by government

Page 4: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Economies of scale – natural monopolies

Natural monopolies are often regulated monopolies

Page 5: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Actions by firms to create and protect monopoly power patents and copyrights, high advertising expenditures

result in high sunk costs (costs that are not recoverable on exit), and

illegal actions designed to restrict competition

Page 6: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Monopolies created by government action patents and copyrights, government created franchises,

and licensing.

Page 7: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Local monopoly Local monopoly – a monopoly that

exists in a local geographical area (e.g., local newspapers)

Page 8: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Price elasticity and MR As noted earlier, since the demand

curve facing a monopoly firms is downward sloping, MR < P

MR > 0 when demand is elastic MR = 0 when demand is unit

elastic MR < 0 when demand is inelastic

Page 9: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.
Page 10: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Average revenue As in all other market structures,

AR=P (note that AR = TR/Q = (PxQ) / Q = P)

The price given by the demand curve is the average revenue that the firm receives at each level of output.

Page 11: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Monopolist receiving positive profits

Page 12: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Zero-profit monopolist

Page 13: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Monopolist receiving economic loss

Page 14: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Monopolist that shuts down in the short run

Page 15: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Monopoly price setting There is a unique profit-maximizing

price and output level for a monopoly firm.

It is optimal to produce at the level of output at which MR = MC and to charge the price given by the demand curve at this output level.

Charging a higher (or lower) price results in lower profits.

Page 16: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Price discrimination In imperfectly competitive markets, firms

may increase their profits by engaging in price discrimination (charging higher prices to those customers with the most inelastic demand for the product).

Necessary conditions for price discrimination: the firm must not be a price-taker firms must be able to sort customers by their

elasticity of demand resale must not be feasible

Page 17: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Example: air travel

Page 18: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Dumping If firms practice price discrimination by

charging different prices in different countries, they are often accused of dumping in the low-price country.

Predatory dumping occurs if a country charges a low price initially in an attempt to drive out domestic competitors and then raises prices once the domestic industry is destroyed.

There is little evidence of the existence of predatory dumping.

Page 19: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Today’s slides, 11/6 Based on Dr. Kane’s, with added

detail Available today at www.oswego.edu/~edunne I will ask Dr. Kane to post them on

his site next week.

Page 20: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Deadweight loss due to monopoly

Page 21: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Deadweight loss due to monopoly

Page 22: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

P, MR

Q

D

S=MC

competition

Pc

Qc

consumersurplus

producersurplus

Page 23: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

monopoly

P, MR

Q

DMR

Qm

Pm

consumersurplus

Transfer fromConsumer to producer

deadweight loss

S=MC

Page 24: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Is monopoly efficient? No output too low

deadweight loss Society loses the benefit of that extra

output Monopoly leads to market failure

Page 25: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Other costs associated with monopoly X-inefficiency

Without competition, no incentive to produce efficiently or at least cost

Example: Microsoft What is the incentive to fix software

bugs?

Page 26: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Other costs associated with monopoly Rent-seeking behavior

incur costs to acquire, maintain monopoly power.

Lawyers, lobbyists, etc. This does not benefit society and

diverts resources away from productive activities.

Page 27: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Why allow monopolies? Two potential benefits:

Encourage innovation Patents encourage the development of

new drugs Copyright encourages the development

of new software Economies of scale

One producer meets the market demand at the lowest average cost

Natural monopoly

Page 28: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Regulation of natural monopoly

P, MR

Q

D

MR

Qm

Pm

MC

Pm, Qm isMonopolyoutcome

Qmc

Pmc

Pmc, Qmc is theEfficient outcome

ATC

Qf

PfPf, Qf is the“fair” rate ofreturn

Page 29: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

Regulation of natural monopoly

monopoly outcome: P(m), Q(m)

marginal-cost pricing: P(mc), Q(mc)

“fair-rate of return” pricing system: P(f), Q(f)

Page 30: Chapter 11: Monopoly. Monopoly market single seller for a product with no close substitutes barriers to entry.

summary: monopoly

unique good, barriers to entry Natural, actions by firms, actions by gov’t

choose Q where MR = MC but MR < P

may use price discrimination Qm lower, Pm higher than competition

Inefficient, deadwt. loss May be regulated


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