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Monopoly

Monopoly. Monopoly. is a situation in which there is a single seller of a product for which there are no good substitutes. When a monopoly exists, there are generally high barriers to entry into the industry. What are the reasons for these barriers?. (1) Legal Barriers.

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Monopoly

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  1. Monopoly

  2. Monopoly is a situation in which there is a single seller of a product for which there are no good substitutes.

  3. When a monopoly exists, there are generally high barriers to entry into the industry. What are the reasons for these barriers?

  4. (1) Legal Barriers • patent - grant of an exclusive right to use a specific process or produce a specific product for a period of time (17 years in the U.S.) • licenses and franchises - permission, granted by a government, to enter an industry or occupation

  5. (2) A single firm has sole control of a resource essential to an industry.

  6. (3) Economies of Scale Costs per unit in an industry may be low only when a firm produces a lot of output. Consequently, small firms will be unable to enter the industry because costs are too high.

  7. Market Demand Curve Because the monopoly firm is the only seller of a good, the market demand curve for the good is the same as the demand curve for the firm’s product. price Demand quantity

  8. Remember for a perfectly competitive firm: MR = P. This is not true for the monopolist.

  9. For a monopolist, MR < P.So the MR curve lies below the demand curve. QuantityPriceTRMR 10 20 200 --- 11 19 209 9

  10. Drawing the MR curve when the demand curve is a straight line: MR has the same Y-intercept and is twice as steep as the demand curve . $ Demand MR quantity

  11. Determining the optimal output and price, and the maximum profit: 7 Steps

  12. Step 1 a. Draw and label the axes. $ quantity

  13. Step 1 b. Draw and label the ATC and MC curves. MC $ ATC quantity

  14. Step 1 c. Draw and label the D and MR curves. MC $ ATC MR D quantity

  15. Step 2: Find the profit-maximizing output where MR = MC MC $ ATC MR D Q* quantity

  16. Step 3: Determine the price from the demand curve, above Q*. MC $ ATC P* MR D Q* quantity

  17. Step 4: Determine the cost per unit from the ATC curve, above Q*. MC $ ATC P* ATC* MR D Q* quantity

  18. Step 5: Determine the TR = PQ box. MC $ ATC P* ATC* MR D Q* quantity

  19. Step 6: Determine the TC = ATC . Q box. MC $ ATC P* ATC* MR D Q* quantity

  20. Step 7: Find profit p = TR - TC. MC $ ATC P* ATC* profit MR D Q* quantity

  21. In the previous set of graphs, the monopolist was earning a positive economic profit.It is also possible for the monopolist to have a loss or to breakeven.Let’s look at a monopolist with a loss.

  22. Step 1: Draw and label the axes and curves. (For a loss, the ATC curve must be entirely above D.) ATC MC $ AVC MR D quantity

  23. Step 2: Find the profit-maximizing (or loss-minimizing) output where MR = MC ATC MC $ AVC MR D Q* quantity

  24. Step 3: Determine the price from the demand curve, above Q*. ATC MC $ AVC P* MR D Q* quantity

  25. Step 4: Determine the cost per unit from the ATC curve, above Q*. ATC MC $ AVC ATC* P* MR D Q* quantity

  26. Step 5: Determine the TR = PQ box. ATC MC $ AVC ATC* P* MR D Q* quantity

  27. Step 6: Determine the TC = ATC . Q box. ATC MC $ AVC ATC* P* MR D Q* quantity

  28. Step 7: Find profit or loss p = TR - TC. ATC MC $ AVC ATC* P* loss MR D Q* quantity

  29. A Monopolist Breaking Even (Zero Economic Profit)

  30. Step 1: Draw and label the axes and curves. (To break even, D must be tangent to the ATC curve.) MC $ ATC MR D quantity

  31. Step 2: Find the profit-maximizing output where MR = MC MC $ ATC MR D Q* quantity

  32. Step 3: Determine the price from the demand curve, above Q*. MC $ ATC P* MR D Q* quantity

  33. Step 4: Determine the cost per unit from the ATC curve, above Q*. MC $ ATC ATC* = P* MR D Q* quantity

  34. Step 5: Determine the TR = PQ box. MC $ ATC ATC* = P* MR D Q* quantity

  35. Step 6: Determine the TC = ATC . Q box. MC $ ATC ATC* = P* MR D Q* quantity

  36. Step 7: Find profit p = TR - TC. Since TR = TC, p = 0 MC $ ATC ATC* = P* MR D Q* quantity

  37. Monopoly Possibilities short run: positive profits, losses, or breaking even. long run: positive profits, or breaking even.

  38. What is bad about monopoly? • Consumer options are limited. • Profits do not signal firms to enter the industry. (They can’t get in because of the barriers to entry.) • There is allocative inefficiency. ( P > MC ) The monopolist does not produce all units that consumers value more than it costs to make them.

  39. Allocative Inefficiency ( P* > MC* ) MC $ ATC P* ATC* MC* MR D Q* quantity

  40. Natural Monopoly a situation in which ATC declines continually with increased output. So a single firm would be the lowest cost producer of the output demanded.

  41. ATC doesn’t turn upward until a very high output level, beyond the amounts that consumers will buy. $ ATC quantity

  42. Remember: the MC curve is below the ATC curve when ATC is sloping downward. $ MC ATC quantity

  43. Draw the demand and MR curves. $ D MR MC ATC quantity

  44. What can the government do about a natural monopoly? • government take over the industry • let it operate freely • government regulation of monopolist

  45. Natural Monopoly: operating freely $ D P* MR MC ATC Q* quantity

  46. Regulation • marginal cost pricing (P = MC) • average cost pricing (P = ATC)

  47. Natural Monopoly: marginal cost pricing regulation $ D MR MC ATC Pm Qm quantity

  48. Natural Monopoly: marginal cost pricing regulation P < ATC Firm has a loss! So this won’t work. $ D MR MC ATC Pm Qm quantity

  49. Natural Monopoly: Average Cost Pricing Regulation $ D MR Pa ATC MC Qa quantity

  50. Natural Monopoly: Average Cost Pricing Regulation Zero economic profits: this can work. $ D MR Pa ATC MC Qa quantity

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