1 / 21

Pure Monopoly

Pure Monopoly. Chapter 11. Monopoly. Characteristics: Single seller No close substitutes Price maker Blocked entry Nonprice competition. Examples of Monopoly. Examples are relatively rare Government owned or regulated utility companies These are called natural monopolies.

tbridges
Télécharger la présentation

Pure Monopoly

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pure Monopoly Chapter 11

  2. Monopoly • Characteristics: • Single seller • No close substitutes • Price maker • Blocked entry • Nonprice competition

  3. Examples of Monopoly • Examples are relatively rare • Government owned or regulated utility companies • These are called natural monopolies

  4. Barriers to entry • Factors that prohibit firms from entering an industry are called barriers to entry.

  5. Economies of Scale • Serves as an entry barrier in a pure monopoly • New firms are unable to realize the cost savings of a monopolist

  6. Legal Barriers to Entry • Patents • Licenses

  7. Patents • Exclusive right of an inventor to use their invention for 20 years without competition • This serves as a reward for developing a product that is in demand

  8. Licenses • Government limits entry into an industry through licensing • i.e. the federal communications commission only allows so many radio & t.v. stations in a specific area

  9. Monopoly Demand • Demand curve • Down sloping appearance • Supply curve for firm and industry is same thing since there is only one firm

  10. MR<Price • Sales can only increase by charging a lower price • Lower price applies not only to the extra output sold but also to all prior units of output

  11. Price Maker • Price is determined by how many products they want to sell • Price is set in the “elastic” portion of the demand curve

  12. Output & Price Determination • Cost Data • Still competes for resources • Employs same technology as pc firm • MR=MC Rule -Profit-Maximizing Point • Same as competitive industry

  13. Misconceptions • Not highest price • Total, not unit, profit • Possibility of losses by a monopolist

  14. Simultaneous consumption • A product’s ability to satisfy a large number of consumers at the same time.

  15. X-Inefficiency • Occurs when a firm’s actual cost of producing any output is greater than the lowest possible cost of producing it.

  16. Rent-Seeking Behavior • Ability to earn rent on a resource that you own • If your competitor has to have the resource, they have no alternative to buy it from you.

  17. Price Discrimination • The practice of selling a specific product at more than one price when the price differences are not justified by cost differences.

  18. Conditions • Price discrimination is possible when the following conditions are realized. • Monopoly power • Market segregation • No resale

  19. Socially optimal price • Price that achieves allocative efficiency • Government establishes a price ceiling to prevent firms from taking advantage of consumers

  20. Fair-Return Price • Socially optimal prices may lead to losses by a firm • The fair-return price should fall on the firm’s ATC curve

More Related