Monopoly Standard Profit Maximization is max r(y)-c(y).

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Price competition.. Firm Behavior under Profit Maximization Monopoly Bertrand Price Competition.
Advertisements

Price competition..
Oligopoly A monopoly is when there is only one firm.
The World of Oligopoly: Preliminaries to Successful Entry
Monopoly Standard Profit Maximization is max r(y)-c(y). With Monopoly this is Max p(y)y-c(y) (the difference to competition is price now depends upon output).
Chapter Twenty-Seven Oligopoly. u A monopoly is an industry consisting a single firm. u A duopoly is an industry consisting of two firms. u An oligopoly.
Static Games and Cournot Competition
Chapter Twenty-Four Monopoly. Pure Monopoly u A monopolized market has a single seller. u The monopolist’s demand curve is the (downward sloping) market.
Profit Maximization What is the goal of the firm?
Managerial Economics & Business Strategy Chapter 9 Basic Oligopoly Models.
Monopoly Standard Profit Maximization is max r(y)-c(y). With Monopoly this is Max p(y)y-c(y) (the difference to competition is price now depends upon output).
Monopoly. Monopoly: Why? u Natural monopoly (increasing returns to scale), e.g. (parts of) utility companies? u Artificial monopoly –a patent; e.g. a.
Static Games and Cournot Competition
Chapter Twenty-Seven Oligopoly. u A monopoly is an industry consisting a single firm. u A duopoly is an industry consisting of two firms. u An oligopoly.
© 2010 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. 27 Oligopoly.
The Production Decision of a Monopoly Firm Alternative market structures: perfect competition monopolistic competition oligopoly monopoly.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1 Chapter 11: Monopoly We are now back in partial equilibrium. So far we assumed perfect competition. In this chapter, we study the other extreme, when.
© 2010 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. 24 Monopoly. © 2010 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.  Pure Monopoly u A monopolized market has a single seller. u The.
Chapter 24 Monopoly. 2 Pure Monopoly A monopolized market has a single seller. The monopolist’s demand curve is the (downward sloping) market demand curve.
1 Intermediate Microeconomics Monopoly. 2 Pure Monopoly A Monopolized market has only a single seller. Examples? XM radio? Microsoft? Walmart in a small.
Profit Maximization What is the goal of the firm? –Expand, expand, expand: Amazon. –Earnings growth: GE. –Produce the highest possible quality: this class.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Monopoly Chapter 12.
David Bryce © Adapted from Baye © 2002 Power of Rivalry: Economics of Competition and Profits MANEC 387 Economics of Strategy MANEC 387 Economics.
Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
1 Intermediate Microeconomics Monopoly. 2 Pure Monopoly A Monopolized market has only a single seller. Examples: XM radio? Microsoft? Walmart in a small.
Chapter 9: Static Games and Cournot Competition 1 Static Games and Cournot Competition.
Lecture 20 Monopoly. Market structure Market structures: u A monopolized market - a single seller. u Monopoly affects the price (has market power) u Takes.
CHAPTER 12 Imperfect Competition. The profit-maximizing output for the monopoly 2 If there are no other market entrants, the entrepreneur can earn monopoly.
Lecture 12Slide 1 Topics to be Discussed Oligopoly Price Competition Competition Versus Collusion: The Prisoners’ Dilemma.
Chapter Twenty-Seven Oligopoly. u A monopoly is an industry consisting a single firm. u A duopoly is an industry consisting of two firms. u An oligopoly.
Monopoly 垄断.  A monopolized market has a single seller.  The monopolist’s demand curve is the (downward sloping) market demand curve.  So the monopolist.
Chapter 24 MONOPOLY Maximizing profits The monopolist will always set p=p(y). r(y)=p(y)y The monopolist’s profit-maximization problem then takes.
Monopoly 2 Bad things that monopolist do!. Laugher Curve The First Law of Economics: For every economist, there exists an equal and opposite economist.
1 Monopoly Molly W. Dahl Georgetown University Econ 101 – Spring 2009.
Bertrand (1883) price competition. Both firms choose prices simultaneously and have constant marginal cost c. Firm one chooses p1. Firm two chooses p2.
Chapter 28 Oligopoly It is the case that lies between two extremes (pure competition and pure monopoly). Often there are a number of competitors but not.
Chapter 27 Oligopoly. Oligopoly A monopoly is an industry consisting a single firm. A duopoly is an industry consisting of two firms. An oligopoly is.
Monopoly 1. Why Monopolies Arise Monopoly –Firm that is the sole seller of a product without close substitutes –Price maker Barriers to entry –Monopoly.
Lecture 7 Price competition. Bertrand’s Model of Oligopoly Strategic variable price rather than output. Single good produced by n firms Cost to firm i.
David Bryce © Adapted from Baye © 2002 Power of Rivalry: Economics of Competition and Profits MANEC 387 Economics of Strategy MANEC 387 Economics.
Monopoly.
Chapter Twenty-Four Monopoly.
Unit 3: Costs of Production and Perfect Competition
Static Games and Cournot Competition
Price competition..
24 C H A P T E R Pure Monopoly.
Chapter 24 Monopoly.
Lecture 19 Monopoly.
Monopoly.
24 Monopoly.
27 Oligopoly.
Chapter 28 Oligopoly.
Today Oligopoly Theory Economic Experiment in Class.
Molly W. Dahl Georgetown University Econ 101 – Spring 2009
BUS 525: Managerial Economics Basic Oligopoly Models
Lecture 9 Static Games and the Cournot Model
Static Games and Cournot Competition
Lecture 19 Monopoly.
Monopoly.
Lecture 20 Monopoly.
Lecture 20 Monopoly.
Lecture 19 Monopoly.
Lecture 20 Monopoly.
Lecture 19 Monopoly.
Lecture 19 Monopoly.
Chapter Twenty-Seven Oligopoly.
Profit Maximization What is the goal of the firm?
Lecture 20 Monopoly.
Monopoly.
Presentation transcript:

Monopoly Standard Profit Maximization is max r(y)-c(y). With Monopoly this is Max p(y)y-c(y) (the difference to competition is price now depends upon output). FOC yields p(y)+p’(y)y=c’(y). This is also Marginal Revenue=Marginal Cost. This equals p(y)*(1-1/¦ε¦)=c’(y) remember ε=(dy/dp)*(p/y) Notice there is a problem unless ¦ε¦>1.

Example Price is p(y)=120-2y Cost is c(y)=y2 Profit is p(y)*y-c(y) what is choice of y? What is the competitive equilibrium y? Why is a monopoly inefficient? In a diagram, what is the welfare loss?

Rule of thumb prices Many shops use a rule of thumb to determine prices. Clothing stores may set price double their costs. Restaurants set menu prices roughly 4 times costs. Can this ever be optimal? If q=Apє what is elasticity? What is price if marginal cost is constant?

Why Monopolies? What causes monopolies? a legal fiat; e.g. US Postal Service a patent; e.g. a new drug sole ownership of a resource; e.g. a toll highway formation of a cartel/collusion; e.g. OPEC large economies of scale; e.g. local utility companies.

Patents A patent is a monopoly right granted to an inventor. It lasts about 17 years. There is a trade-off between loss due to monopoly rights incentive to innovate.

Natural Monopoly When is a monopoly natural such as in certain public utilities? C(y)=1+y2. P(y)=3-y. Where does p=mc? What is profits at this point for one firm? What happens when another firm enters?

Taxes What happens to the monopoly’s choice under a profit tax? What happens under a quantity tax? This shifts up the supply/marginal cost curve. The monopolist chooses where MR=MC so the quantity is reduced. Consequently, welfare is lower.

Oligopoly A monopoly is when there is only one firm. An oligopoly is when there is a limited number of firms where each firm’s decisions influence the profits of the other firms. We can model the competition between the firms price and quantity, simultaneously sequentially.

Quantity competition (Cournot 1838) Л1=p(q1+q2)q1-c(q1) Л2= p(q1+q2)q2-c(q2) Firm 1 chooses quantity q1 while firm 2 chooses quantity q2. Say these are chosen simultaneously. An equilibrium is where Firm 1’s choice of q1 is optimal given q2. Firm 2’s choice of q2 is optimal given q1. If D(p)=4-p and c(q)=q, what the equilibrium quantities and prices. Take FOCs and solve simultaneous equations. Can also use intersection of reaction curves.

Quantity competition (Stackelberg 1934) Л1=p(q1+q2)q1-c(q1) Л2= p(q1+q2)q2-c(q2) Firm 1 chooses quantity q1. AFTERWARDS, firm 2 chooses quantity q2. An equilibrium now is where Firm 2’s choice of q2 is optimal given q1. Firm 1’s choice of q1 is optimal given q2(q1). That is, firm 1 takes into account the reaction of firm 2 to his decision.

Stackelberg solution If D(p)=4-p and c(q)=q, what the equilibrium quantities and prices. Must first solve for firm 2’s decision given q1. Maxq2 [(4-q1-q2)-1]q2 Must then use this solution to solve for firm 1’s decision given q2(q1) (this is a function!) Maxq1 [4-q1-q2(q1)-1]q1

Bertrand (1883) price competition. Both firms choose prices simultaneously and have constant marginal cost c. Firm one chooses p1. Firm two chooses p2. Consumers buy from the lowest price firm. (If p1=p2, each firm gets half the consumers.) An equilibrium is a choice of prices p1 and p2 such that firm 1 wouldn’t want to change his price given p2. firm 2 wouldn’t want to change her price given p1.

Bertrand Equilibrium Take firm 1’s decision if p2 is strictly bigger than c: If he sets p1>p2, then he earns 0. If he sets p1=p2, then he earns 1/2*D(p2)*(p2-c). If he sets p1 such that c<p1<p2 he earns D(p1)*(p1-c). For a large enough p1<p2, we have: D(p1)*(p1-c)>1/2*D(p2)*(p2-c). Each has incentive to slightly undercut the other. Equilibrium is that both firms charge p1=p2=c. Not so famous Kaplan & Wettstein (2000) paper shows that there may be other equilibria with positive profits if there aren’t restrictions on D(p).

Collusion If firms get together to set prices or limit quantities what would they choose. D(p)=4-p and c(q)=q. Quantity Maxq1,q2 (4-q1-q2-1)*(q1+q2). Price Maxp (p-1)*(4-p) This is the monopoly price and quantity! Show all 4 possibilities (Cournot, Bertrand, Collusion, Stackelberg) on the q1, q2 graph?

Anti-competitive practices. In the 80’s, Crazy Eddie said that he will beat any price since he is insane. Today, many companies have price-beating and price-matching policies. They seem very much in favor of competition: consumers are able to get the lower price. In fact, they are not. By having such a policy a stores avoid loosing customers and thus are able to charge a high initial price (yet another paper by this Kaplan guy).