Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition Chapter 24: Monopoly.

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Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition Chapter 24: Monopoly

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition Monopoly producers face A. many competitors producing the same product. B. only a few competitors producing the same product. C. at least one competitive producer of the same product. D. no competitive producers of the same product.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition In a monopoly, A. the firm is large in an absolute sense. B. the market is small in an absolute sense. C. the firm and the industry are the same thing. D. the monopolist determines how much each firm will produce.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition In order for a firm to receive monopoly profits, there must be A. homogeneous products. B. barriers to market entry. C. mutual interdependence among firms. D. free entry and exit to the market.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition Refer to the figure below. The long-run average cost curve and the long-run marginal cost curves represent A. the cost curves for a competitive firm. B. the cost curves for a natural monopoly. C. a situation where a firm has control over the raw materials. D. a situation where a firm has a patent.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition If a monopolist wishes to increase its output and quantity sold, A. it must reduce its price, so its marginal revenue is greater than its price. B. it must reduce its price, so its marginal revenue is less than its price. C. it must raise its price, so its marginal revenue is greater than its price. D. it must raise its price, so its marginal revenue is less than its price.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition For the monopolist, marginal revenue is A. equal to price. B. less than average revenue since price must be lowered to sell additional units. C. greater than price. D. not a consideration in the firm's pricing.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition The demand curve facing a monopolist will be more elastic A. the greater is the number of substitute products. B. as the consumers' need for the good increases. C. the greater is the amount of fixed costs to cover. D. as the number of consumers increases.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition Suppose a monopolist's costs and revenues are as follows: ATC = $45.00; MC = $35.00; MR = $35.00; P = $ The firm should A. increase output and decrease price. B. decrease output and increase price. C. not change output or price. D. shut down.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition For a monopolist that is maximizing profits, A. price exceeds marginal cost. B. price equals marginal revenue. C. price equals average total cost. D. marginal revenue exceeds price.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition In the figure below, the monopolist's profit- maximizing output level is A.B.C.D.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition A monopolist is maximizing profit at an output rate of 1,000 units per month. At this output rate, the price that its customers are willing and able to pay is $8 per unit, average total cost is $5 per unit, and marginal cost is $6 per unit. It may be concluded that at this monthly output rate, marginal revenue is A. $5 per unit, and the monopolist earns zero economic profits. B. $6 per unit, and the monopolist earns economic profits of $2,000 per month. C. $6 per unit, and the monopolist earns economic losses of $1,000 per month. D. $6 per unit, and the monopolist earns economic profits of $3,000 per month.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition If the figure below accurately portrays the market conditions for a given monopolist, we can be assured that the monopolist A. is making a normal profit. B. is producing at the level that will maximize benefit to society. C. is making excessive profits. D. will be forced to go out of business in the long run.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition Price discrimination refers to A. selling a product at different prices according to the differences in marginal cost of providing it to different consumers. B. selling a product at different prices, with the price difference being unrelated to differences in marginal cost. C. charging the same prices to all consumers but selling them different quantities. D. a deliberate effort on the part of a monopoly producer to confuse consumers.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition For a firm to be able to engage in price discrimination, it must A. face a downward-sloping demand curve. B. produce more than one product. C. have customers of different levels of wealth and age. D. have economies of scale.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition Which of the following statements about a monopolist is TRUE? A. Monopolies tend to misallocate resources. B. All monopolies are unlawful in the United States. C. Monopolies tend to allocate resources in a socially optimal manner. D. Monopolies will always make a profit in the long run.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition The profit-maximizing price and quantity established by a perfectly competitive firm in the figure are A.Q 1 units of output and a price of P 5. B.Q 3 units of output and a price of P 3. C.Q 1 units of output and a price of P 1. D.Q 4 units of output and a price of P 4.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition In a perfectly competitive market, if all firms face identical, constant marginal marginal cost curves, then consumer surplus is A. the area beneath the market demand curve and above the market clearing price. B. the area above the market demand curve and above the market clearing price. C. the total area beneath the market demand curve. D. definitely zero.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition If the marginal cost curve of all identical firms in a perfectly competitive industry are horizontal at the same per-unit cost, then the market's consumer surplus equals the area A. beneath the demand curve and above the marginal cost curve. B. above the demand curve and beneath the marginal cost curve. C. below the marginal cost curve. D. above the demand curve.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition The portion of consumer surplus that no one in society is able to obtain in a situation of monopoly is known as A. a market failure. B. a deadweight loss. C. an unrealized loss. D. a market externality.

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition If marginal cost is constant, what happens to a market if it alters from perfect competition to monopoly without any change in the position of the market demand curve or any variation in costs? A. Consumer surplus decreases, producer surplus increases, and a deadweight loss is created. B. Consumer surplus decreases, producer surplus decreases, and a deadweight loss is created. C. Consumer surplus increases, producer surplus decreases, and a deadweight loss is created. D. Consumer surplus increases, producer surplus increases, and a deadweight loss is created..

Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition Economists criticize monopolies because monopolies A. always price discriminate. B. receive accounting profits. C. restrict output and raise prices compared to a competitive situation. D. make consumers pay more for their product than the customers value the product.