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Published byDarrell Wilkinson Modified over 9 years ago
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Monopoly Demand Curve The industry and the firm are the same The demand curve is downsloping
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Supply Curve There is no supply curve for a pure monopoly It is possible for different demand conditions to bring about different prices for the same output
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Marginal Revenue MR is less than P for a monopoly except for the 1 st unit They can increase sales only by charging a lower price
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0 123456 $142 132 122 112 102 92 82 Price and Marginal Revenue Marginal Revenue is Less Than Price D A Monopolist is Selling 3 Units at $142 To Sell More (4), Price Must Be Lowered to $132 All Customers Must Pay the Same Price TR Increases $132 Minus $30 (3x$10) Gain = $132 Loss = $30
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Price Maker The monopolist sets the price of its product by controlling the supply They will set prices in the elastic range of demand (TR test---as price declines, TR increases)
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Profit Maximization MR = MC rule still applies Draw a vertical line up from where MR = MC to the D curve to find P
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Profit Maximization 0 $200 175 150 125 25 100 75 50 Price, Costs, and Revenue 12345678910 Quantity D MR ATC MC MR=MC P m =$122 A=$94 Economic Profit
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Loss Minimization 0 Price, Costs, and Revenue Quantity By A Pure Monopolist D MR ATC MC MR=MC Loss AVC PmPm QmQm V A
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Economic Effects of Monopoly Price, Output, and Efficiency Purely Competitive Market Pure Monopoly D D S=MC MC P=MC= Minimum ATC MR PcPc QcQc PcPc PmPm QcQc QmQm Pure Competition is Efficient Monopoly P is >MC And Is Inefficient- make too little at too high a cost a b c
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Misconceptions About Monopolies 1. Not highest price- seek maximum profit, not price. Some high prices would reduce sales and total revenue 2. Seek maximum total profit not unit profit 3. Possibility of loss- monopolies are not immune to escalating resource costs or changing tastes
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X inefficiency When a firm produces output at a level higher than the lowest possible cost of producing Reasons: 1. Poorly motivated workers Bad management- looking to expand their power, nepotism etc ***competitive firms avoid x inefficiency because of competition
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Rent-Seeking Behavior Any activity designed to transfer income or wealth to a particular firm or resource supplier at someone else’s or even society’s expense- increases costs without making a better product
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Problems with Monopolies 1. Charge higher than competitive prices 2. Stifle innovation 3. Engage in rent-seeking behavior 4. X inefficiency
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Government Actions 1. if the monopoly is obtained through anti-competitive means, the government can apply anti-trust laws 2. Regulate prices 3. Can ignore it if the monopoly appears short-lived
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Price Discrimination The practice of selling a specific product at more than one price when the price differences are not justified by cost differences
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3 Types of Price Discrimination 1. Charging each customer in a single market the maximum price he is willing to pay 2. Charging each customer one price for the first set of units purchased and a lower price for the subsequent units purchased 3. Charging some customers one price and other customers another price
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Conditions for Price Discrimination 1. Monopoly Power 2. Market segregation- separate buyers into different classes 3. No resale
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Examples of Price Discrimination 1. Golf and movie theatres- different age and time costs (seniors, weekend)- more expensive on the weekend 2. Airlines charge higher rates on big business travel days
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Figure 8a: Price Discrimination 30 E ATC 80 $120 D MR MC (a) Number of Round-trip Tickets Dollars per Ticket
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Figure 8b: Price Discrimination 30 Dollars per Ticket 120 D MR MC 10 $160 Additional profit from price discrimination Number of Round-trip Tickets (b)
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Figure 8c: Price Discrimination Number of Round-trip Tickets Dollars per Ticket $120 D MR MC 30 100 40 F G H Additional profit from price discrimination (c)
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Using the Theory: Price Discrimination at Colleges and Universities Most colleges and universities give some kind of financial aid to a large proportion of their students Financial aid has been used as an effective method of price discrimination Designed to increase revenue of the college Colleges have long been in an especially good position to benefit from price discrimination, because they satisfy all three requirements Face downward-sloping demand curves Able to identify consumers willing to pay more Able to prevent low-price customers from reselling to high- price customers
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Socially Optimal Price P = MC Regulated price set as a price ceiling (maximum cost)
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Fair Return Cost P = ATC At times the socially acceptable cost causes the firm to “lose” Governments can subsidize the difference or allow the firm to charge enough to have “fair returns”
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Regulated Monopoly
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Perfectly Discriminating Monopoly Unregulated Perfectly Discriminating
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