Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Economics 111.3 Winter 14 April 4 th, 2014 Lecture 32 Ch. 13: Pure monopoly.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Economics 111.3 Winter 14 April 4 th, 2014 Lecture 32 Ch. 13: Pure monopoly."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 Economics 111.3 Winter 14 April 4 th, 2014 Lecture 32 Ch. 13: Pure monopoly

3 FINAL EXAM is based on chapters 3, 4, 5 (up to p. 116), 6 (up to p. 138), 8, 9, 10 (up to p. 230, 11, 12, 13, and 14 Its format: 100 Multiple-Choice Questions When and Where: April 21, from 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m; STM 140 Extra Office Hours: April 19, from 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. Final Exam:

4 A recap:

5 The Price-Discriminating Monopolist A price-discriminating monopolist can charge customers with more inelastic demands a higher price. It can charge customers with more elastic demands a lower price As a result, a price discriminating monopolist earns more profit than a normal monopolist Example: Aspirin sold in airports is much more expensive than the Aspirin sold in grocery stores

6 Examples of price discrimination: Airlines charge high fares to executive travelers (inelastic demand) than vacation travelers (elastic demand). Electric utilities frequently segment their markets by end uses, such as lighting and heating. (Lack of substitutes for lighting makes this demand inelastic). Long ‑ distance phone service has higher rates during the day, when businesses must make their calls (inelastic demand), and lower rates at night and on week ‑ ends, when less important calls are made. Movie theatres and golf courses vary their charges on the basis of time and age. Discount coupons are a form of price discrimination, allowing firms to offer a discount to price-sensitive customers. International trade has examples of firms selling at different prices to customers in different countries.

7

8 Suppose Global Air has identifiable customer groups: –last-minute business travelers, willing to pay up to $1800 per trip –scheduled business travelers, willing to pay up to $1600 per trip, no weekend layovers –other travelers, willing to pay up to $1400, no weekend layovers –vacationers, willing to pay up to $1200, and to stay over Saturday night

9 Perfect Price Discrimination Perfect price discrimination refers to the situation when the monopolist knows exactly the willingness to pay of each customer and can charge each customer a different price.

10

11 Perfect Price Discrimination With perfect price discrimination, output increases to the point at which price equals marginal cost — where the marginal cost intersects the demand curve. Output is identical to that of perfect competition.

12

13 Perfect Price Discrimination and Efficiency Perfect price discrimination pushes consumer surplus to zero but increases producer surplus to equal the sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus in perfect competition. Deadweight loss is zero: perfect price discrimination achieves efficiency.

14 True-False Questions 1.In the long run the pure monopolist must produce at that output where average total cost is at a minimum. 2.The supply curve for a monopolist is the upsloping portion of the marginal cost curve that lies above the average variable cost curve.

15 3.Monopolistic producers always earn economic profits. 4.A monopolist practicing perfect price discrimination will produce at a socially optimal level of output 5.A monopolist practicing price discrimination will charge a higher price in the market with the higher elasticity of demand

16 Ch. 14: Monopolistic Competition

17 Oligopoly Market Structure Continuum Pure Competition Pure Monopoly Monopolistic Competition Four Market Structures Market structure involves the number of firms in the market and the barriers to entry Monopolistic competition is a market structure in which there are many firms selling differentiated products but competing with other firms selling similar products Oligopoly is a market structure in which there are a few interdependent firms

18

19

20 A concentration ratio is the percentage of industry sales by the top few firms of the industry

21 Competitive and Monopolistic aspects The “many sellers” characteristic gives monopolistic competition its competitive aspect. As a result: firms do not take into account their rivals’ responses to their decisions. collusion (price fixing) is difficult (due to a large number of firms) there is easy entry of new firms in the long run Its monopolistic aspect comes from product differentiation based upon: product attributes, service, location, brand names, packaging perceived quality competitive advertising.

22 Easy Entry of New Firms in the Long Run There are no significant barriers to entry in monopolistic competition. The existence of economic profits induces other firms to enter, bringing long-run profit down to zero.

23 Q D MR MC P ATC Price and Costs Q p economic profit expect new competitors

24 Q D MR MC P ATC Price and Costs Q p EconomicprofitsdecreaseEconomicprofitsdecrease demand curve shifts left

25 Q D MR MC P ATC Price and Costs Q p in the long run, profits are zero

26 Q D MR MC P ATC Price and Costs Q ploss expect fewer competitors

27 Q D MR MC P ATC Price and Costs Q p some firms exit  D shifts right  losses get smaller some firms exit  D shifts right  losses get smaller

28 Q D MR MC P ATC Price and Costs Q p in the long run, profits are zero

29

30

31 Easy Entry of New Firms in the Long Run Complications: persistent positive profits may persist if: –there is continuing & significant product differentiation –entry is somewhat limited by the financial investment required to establish product differentiation overall, we still expect the general results


Download ppt "Economics 111.3 Winter 14 April 4 th, 2014 Lecture 32 Ch. 13: Pure monopoly."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google