Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

 Firm that is sole seller of product without close substitutes  Price Maker not a Price Taker  There are barriers to entry thru: Monopoly Resources,

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: " Firm that is sole seller of product without close substitutes  Price Maker not a Price Taker  There are barriers to entry thru: Monopoly Resources,"— Presentation transcript:

1

2  Firm that is sole seller of product without close substitutes  Price Maker not a Price Taker  There are barriers to entry thru: Monopoly Resources, Gov’t Regulation or Production Process  Will produce when P > MC

3  One firm has sole ownership of a key resource used in production of a good  DeBeers is good example with diamonds

4  Usually created because of use of patents and copyrights  Trade-off is less competition, but encourages research & development

5  A single firm can supply a good/service to a market at a smaller cost than 2 or more firms could  There are economies of scale, ATC falls as scale becomes larger

6  Demand curve for monopolist is downward sloping, not perfectly elastic as in a competitive market

7  MR is always less than P for monopolist  True because of downward shaped D curve  When monopolist increases Q, there is an output effect (higher Q, increases TR) and a price effect (lower P, decreases TR)  MR can even be negative if price effect is greater than output effect

8

9  Also produce where MR = MC just like competitive markets  However for a monopoly: P > MR = MC  So monopolist sets Q where MR = MC then goes up to Demand curve to set P

10

11  Profit = (P – ATC) x Q

12  Does a monopoly maximize total surplus?  To do this, we would need to produce where Demand & MC intersect

13  Monopolist produces less than the socially efficient quantity of output  Similar to situation with a tax, but instead of tax revenue it is profit to the monopolist

14  Monopoly’s profit gives producers more surplus than consumers’ surplus, but keeps same total surplus as it would have had  Deadweight loss is created by inefficiently low level of output, not really the higher price

15  Selling the same good at different prices to different customers  Ex: Hardback vs. Paperback Novels  Strategy for monopolists to increase profit  Requires ability to separate customers based on their willingness to pay  Can raise economic welfare by lowering DWL, shows up as higher producer surplus

16  Buying a good at a lower price in one market and reselling it in another market at a higher price  This prevents price discrimination by monopolists

17  Monopolist knows exactly each customer’s willingness to pay and can charge each person a different price  In this case, consumer surplus is zero and total surplus equals the firm’s profit – no DWL

18  Movie tickets  Airline prices  Discount coupons  Financial aid  Quantity discounts

19 1. Antitrust Laws - Sherman Antitrust Act (1890) - Clayton Antitrust Act (1914) Allows gov’t to prevent mergers that limit competition, and can break up companies that reduce social welfare Can the gov’t effectively judge social benefit vs. social cost?

20 2. Regulation - Often regulate prices of natural monopolies (PUCO) (PUCO) - Where does the gov’t set the price? MC pricing? Problem with that is MC < ATC for monopolist, so this would mean the company loses $

21  Alternatives: 1. Subsidize the monopoly: but this creates need for taxes to pay for it & more DWL 2. Average-cost pricing: like a tax on the good because P no longer = MC 3. MC-pricing also gives no incentive to monopolist to lower costs (unless you let them keep part of cost savings as profit)

22 3. Public Ownership - Common in Europe; in U.S., we do this with Post Office - Problem again is creating incentive to cut costs

23 4. Doing Nothing - All “solutions” to monopolies have their drawbacks, so many economists prefer doing nothing


Download ppt " Firm that is sole seller of product without close substitutes  Price Maker not a Price Taker  There are barriers to entry thru: Monopoly Resources,"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google