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MONOPOLY • Pure monopoly: a single seller of a good or service with no close substitutes. The firm IS the industry. Monopoly power: the ability of a firm to control the market price of it’s good by making more or less of it available to buyers. Conditions for monopoly to exist 1. A single seller of a good. The firm is the industry. 2. No close substitutes for this good or service. 3. Very high barriers to entry into this industry... ...constraint that prevents additional sellers from entering the industry and competing with the monopolist. Types of Barriers to Entry 1) Natural barriers to entry... ...the existence of large economies of scale makes it cheaper for one large firm to produce the good compared with many small firms. Once this firm is established, it will have a cost advantage over any new entry. Examples: Water, Electricity, Natural gas, Local telephone service (Utilities) Monopolies due to economies of scale are referred to as Natural Monopolies. Types of Barriers to Entry 2) Legal barriers to entry a) government franchises and license Examples: Postal service, Utilities, Cable TV, Taxi’s, Medicine, Law Government usually takes Natural Monopolies and legally prevents any other firm from producing that good. Why? Since it is more efficient(lowest cost) for one firm to produce this good, the government wants to make sure customers enjoy this efficiency... ...by the government regulating prices that are charged! b) Patents and copyrights... ...granted to inventors and performers to encourage research and development. Good for a 20 year period. Types of Barriers to Entry 3)The ownership of an entire supply of a resource Examples: Having control over all diamond mines in the world The special ability or knowledge a person may have. The “best” of the best... ...Performers, actors, songwriters, etc Monopoly and Price A Monopoly has control over price (Monopoly power) • Unlike perfect competition, a monopolist can raise price and still be able to sell some of it’s good. Why? The consumer has no where else to buy the good: Single Firm is the INDUSTRY with barriers to entry • Will a monopolist simply raise prices to outrageous levels to gouge the consumer? Not if they want to maximize profit! • The monopolist faces the MARKET (Industry) Demand curve (which is downward sloping)… …if prices are too high consumers can stop buying the good Example: A Monopolist (Market) $110 Demand Curve Price Price $110 $100 $ 90 $ 80 $ 70 $ 60 $ 50 $ 40 $ 30 $ 20 $ 10 QD 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 $100 $ 90 $ 80 $ 70 $ 60 $ 50 $ 40 $ 30 Demand $ 20 $ 10 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 Q • Assuming a monopolist charges only one price for it’s good it is clear that if the firm lowers the price of the good it will sell more. What will happen to total revenue as the monopolist sells more? Will Marginal Revenue be equal to Price as in perfect competition? Example: A Monopolist (Market) $110 Demand Curve Price Price $110 $100 $ 90 $ 80 $ 70 $ 60 $ 50 $ 40 $ 30 $ 20 $ 10 QD 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 TR $0 $2,000 $3,600 $4,800 $5,600 $6,000 $6,000 $5,600 $4,800 $3,600 $2,000 $100 $ 90 $ 80 $ 70 $ 60 $ 50 $ 40 $ 30 Demand $ 20 $ 10 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 Q Total revenue increases as the monopolist lowers price then reaches a peak and then declines. Marginal revenue(MR) = change in total revenue / change in output Marginal revenue measures how much will total revenue change by selling the NEXT UNIT of the good What will MR be for each level of OUTPUT? Example: A Monopolist (Market) $110 0 Demand Curve Price Price QD TR MR 0 $110 0 $0 --1 $100 1 $100 20 $2,000 $100 2 $ 90 2 $ 90 40 $3,600 $ 80 3 $ 80 4 3 $ 80 60 $4,800 $ 60 $ 70 4 $ 70 80 $5,600 $ 40 5 $ 60 5 $ 60 100 $6,000 $ 20 6 $ 50 6 $ 50 120 $6,000 $ 0 $ 40 $ 40 140 $5,600 $ -20 $ 30 Demand $ 30 160 $4,800 $ -40 Marginal $ 20 Revenue $ 20 180 $3,600 $ -60 $ 10 $ 10 200 $2,000 $ -80 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 Q Marginal revenue(MR) = change in total revenue / change in output From point 1 to point 2 = $1,600 / 20 = $80 From point 2 to point 3 = $1,200 / 20 = $60 From point 3 to point 4 = $ 800 / 20 = $40 Marginal revenue IS LESS THAN PRICE, and IT DECLINES more rapidly than price. Why? Example: A Monopolist (Market) $110 0 Demand Curve Price Price QD TR MR 0 $110 0 $0 --1 $100 1 $100 20 $2,000 $100 2 $ 90 2 $ 90 40 $3,600 $ 80 $ 80 The firms revenue change from $ 70 lowering price to $90 and selling 40 units is $1600 ($1800 - $200) $ 60 Divide this by 20 units and you $ 50 T get $1,600/20 = $80 (MR) $ 40 R The reason MR < P is due $ 30 to the lost revenue from $ 20 having to lower the price in Demand $ 10 order to sell more goods! 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 Q Suppose the monopolist sells 20 units for $100 originally. TR = $2000 If the monopolist wants to sell 40 units it must lower the price to $90 The monopolist gains $1,800(20 x $90) from selling the next 20 units But the firm must lower the price on ALL PREVIOUS UNITS it could have sold for $100. The firm loses $200 from lowering price ($10 difference x 20 units) Summary of MR for a Monopolist Price ($) MR Total Revenue Demand Q1 Quantity Total Revenue MR < P for all relevant levels of output For a linear Demand curve the MR curve intersects the horizontal axis 1/2 of the distance the Demand curve does… …at this point Total Revenue is Maximized… The price that maximizes TR is NOT the price that maximizes Profit! Q1 Quantity Price A Monopolist won’t Price $110 $100 $ 90 $ 80 $ 70 $ 60 $ 50 $ 40 $ 30 $ 20 $ 10 QD 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 MR --$100 $ 80 $ 60 $ 40 $ 20 $ 0 $ -20 $ -40 $ -60 $ -80 MC ---$35 $22 $32 $40 $52 $68 $83 $98 $115 $130 $110 0 charge more than $70 0 since it can’t sell 1 $100 MC 1 80 units 2 $ 90 2 3 $ 80 4 3 $ 70 P 4 5 $ 60 5 6 $ 50 6 $ 40 MC $ 30 Demand $ 20 $ 10 MR 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 Q Any firm maximizes profit at the output level where MR = MC This monopolist will produce 80 units of output when MR = MC. Does the monopolist charge only $40 for it’s product? No, it will seek out the highest price consumers will pay for 80 units. This is represented by the Demand curve(MB). The Monopolist SEARCHES for the highest price, which is $70. Price If a Monopolist’s ATC is low enough then it will make an Economic profit $110 $100 MC $ 90 ATC $ 80 4 $ 70 P $ 60 $ 50 ATC $ 40 MC $ 30 Demand $ 20 $ 10 MR 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 Q Economic Profit A monopolist will make an economic profit if P >ATC at the level of output where MR = MC. Note: A monopoly will charge a price greater than marginal cost Unlike perfect competition, the consumer pays more than what it costs to produce the good Price MC If a Monopolist’s costs (including the ATC) are higher then it may only make a Normal profit $110 $100 ATC $ 90 $ 80 P = ATC $ 70 A monopoly is not guaranteed of $ 60 making an economic profit… $ 50 MC $ 40 $ 30 Demand $ 20 $ 10 MR 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 Q …it depends on the cost of the product and the market demand for the product. If a monopolist has very high costs for a product consumers are not willing to pay a very high price for the monopolist could make a loss... Price MC A case where a Monopolist is making an Economic Loss $110 ATC $100 $ 90 ATC $ 80 P AVC $ 70 $ 60 MC $ 50 $ 40 $ 30 Demand $ 20 $ 10 MR 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 Q Economic Loss This is an example of a monopoly making an economic loss, but operating because it covers all of it’s variable costs in the short run Is there a Supply curve for a Monopolist? NO. Why? • The supply curve derived in perfect competition (the firms MC curve) was done based on the fact that a competitive firm is a Price Taker and REACTS to price. A Monopolist is a Price Searcher It DOES NOT REACT to price changes If demand increases there is no guarantee that a monopoly will decide to produce more. It depends on the shifting of the MR curve. There is NO unique relationship between price and quantity made available from a monopolist. Long run equilibrium. • Will be the same as short-run equilibrium… ...Profits are signals for new firms to enter the industry... ...to take away economic profit... ...but barriers to entry prevent this from happening and a monopolist that makes a profit in the short run can expect to make one in the long run. A monopolist that makes an economic loss will exit the industry... ....and the industry will cease to exist. Comparing Perfect competition & Monopoly Suppose that we are able to transform a constant costs competitive industry into a Pure Monopoly. • How would that effect the quantity of the good produced by the industry? • How would that effect the price of the good? • How would that effect the well being of consumers of that good? Price CONSTANT COST INDUSTRY Price S P* S ’ SRATC LRIS MC = LRAC D’ D q (Tomatoes) A representative firm Competitive marketQ(Tomatoes) A constant cost industry has a perfectly elastic Long run Industry supply curve... ...this implies that LRAC for firms never change or are Constant. Because LRAC never change, neither can MC (Marginal Average rule)....so MC = LRAC for a Constant Cost Industry. We can use the MC=LRAC curve for the market graph as well Price A PM PPC C Market for Tomatoes Consumer Surplus Monopoly Profit Make Industry into a Monopoly Competitive situation Comparing Monopoly & Perfect Competition A Monopolist will produce LESS than a Competitive Industry A Monopolist will charge a HIGHER Price than a Competitive firm B MC =LRAC = LRIS Since PM > LRAC the Monopoly will make an Economic profit MR Demand Quantity(Tomatoes) QM QPC Competitive Equilibrium occurs where LRIS = Demand. P=MC=Min LRAC Consumers are as well off as possible (Maximizing consumer surplus) Triangle ABC A monopoly maximizes profit at the output level where MR = MC, so the MR curve is added to the graph. A monopolist then searches out the highest price to charge off the Demand curve Price A Market for Tomatoes Comparing Monopoly & Perfect Competition Consumer Surplus Monopoly Profit Welfare Loss of Monopoly It has evaporated! It’s a Net Loss(Deadweight Loss) to the Economy PM B PPC C MR QM MC =LRAC = LRIS Demand QPC Quantity(Tomatoes) Consumer Surplus is much smaller in Monopoly than Competition because of the lower quantity and higher price What happened to the Consumer surplus in Competition(Triangle ABC)? The red area is “lost” by the consumer (lower quantity) but not gained by the Monopolist (lower quantity) Price A Market for Tomatoes Comparing Monopoly & Perfect Competition PM Consumer Surplus Monopoly Profit Welfare Loss of Monopoly Net Loss(Deadweight Loss) B PPC C MR QM MC =LRAC = LRIS Demand QPC Quantity(Tomatoes) The Monopolist gains at the expense of consumers welfare… …and the economy as a whole suffers, because overall welfare (Consumer + Monopoly) decreases {Deadweight loss}. P > MC: Indicates that consumers want(and can be made better off) more of the good produced. Monopoly is not allocatively efficient Monopoly is NOT productively efficient Price MC PM ATC ATC M Minimum ATC Demand MR QM Quantity The Monopolist also produces it’s level of output at greater than minimum ATC. Price A Rent Seeking Behavior... In past, Monopoly profit has been called Rent PM PPC B C MR QM Consumer Surplus Monopoly Profit Welfare Loss of Monopoly MC =LRAC = LRIS Demand QPC Quantity(Tomatoes) …seeking or attempting to maintain Monopoly profit Problem of Rent-Seeking behavior: In today’s economy the easiest way to attain or maintain a monopoly is through government intervention to PREVENT COMPETITON... …this means rent seeking behavior: 1)Consumes and wastes resources in having to lobby elected and appointed government officials 2) Leads to government failure: government becomes the “tool” of the rent seeker and makes the allocation of resources even worse than with monopoly alone. In search of even greater profits: Price Discrimination • Definition: Selling a good with the same costs and quality at different prices to different buyers. Examples: Senior discounts or rates, utilities charging different prices for residential use than commercial use, coupons, others • Many industries practice price discrimination: Airlines, movie theaters, golf courses, cereal companies, colleges, others… …by practicing price discrimination a firm can earn more revenue and profits than by charging only a single price. Conditions needed to practice price discrimination a) Firm must have control over the price it can charge. This will be true except for perfectly competitive firms b)The firm must distinguish between buyers who they can charge higher prices to and those who will pay lower prices. In practice this means to distinguish between buyers with inelastic demand and buyers with elastic demand. • Rule: Raise prices on buyers with inelastic demand and lower prices on buyers with elastic demand to increase revenue and profits. c) The good or service must not be re-sellable. If it was buyers who pay the lower price can resell to buyers who must buy at a higher price from the monopolist... …at a slightly lower price than the monopolist and pocket the difference. Types of Price discrimination 1) Discrimination among quantities (Block pricing)... …charging a different unit price for a different quantity sold. • Example: Block Pricing by a utility that supplies electricity (Residents pay cheaper rates per kilowatt than industry) • Other examples: In the food industry, a lower unit price is charged for bigger containers than for small containers… …those that buy bigger containers will have greater elasticity of demand) i.e. Storage capacity Types of Price discrimination 2) Discrimination among buyers or markets... ...charging different prices for different sets of buyers because they have different characteristics. • The firm must find consumers that have inelastic demand and those with elastic demand and charge higher prices and lower prices respectively. Examples: Airline industry...business travelers (inelastic) and tourists (elastic). Develop a pricing scheme that exploits these segmented markets. • Movie theater industry...those that can attend during the day and those who only can attend at night. A possible remedy: Anti-Trust laws • If a monopoly exists the government can break up the firm (among other penalties) using anti-trust laws to reestablish competition. • Examples: Standard Oil in 1911, ATT in mid 1980’s NCAA in early 1980’s • Laws also used to prevent Mergers, if they restrict competition. Ex: Pepsi - Dr. Pepper, Coke -7 UP • At the discretion of the Justice Department • IBM was charged for monopoly practices in late 1960’s, but by 1982 the case was dismissed. • Microsoft was accused of monopoly practices. Natural monopoly... …an Industry with such large economies of scale LRAC always declines as more of the good is produced (for the relevant market) • Implies that one large firm can produce this good at much lower cost than many small firms… …so breaking up a Natural Monopoly does no good… Price Problem with Natural Monopoly... Solution: Government steps in and forces the monopolist to charge a lower price and produce a higher quantity (Regulation) A Natural Monopoly Economic Profit PM Demand LRAC MR QM LRMC Quantity of Electricity …although it is cheaper for one firm to produce this good at high levels of output, the Monopolist will not produce that output. Reason: It is not profitable to produce beyond MR=MC. So P > LRAC: Consumers DO NOT get the benefit of lower costs Price A Natural Monopoly Economic Profit PM Demand Solution: Government steps in and forces the monopolist to charge a lower price and produce a higher quantity (Regulation) Loss per unit with MC price PAC PMC LRAC QM MR QA QMC LRMC Quantity of Electricity a) Price = marginal cost. This Cwill maximize consumer surplus. Called Marginal cost pricing Problem: Monopolist will make economic losses at this price and decide not to produce this good or service unless subsidized Solution: allow the firm to charge where Price = Average cost. b) Average cost or “Rate of return” pricing The Price is higher than Marginal Cost pricing, but it allows the monopolist to stay in business without subsidies. Rate of Return: Reality problems 1) A commission is set up to establish and monitor prices for the utility. a. Usually, commission members are former members of the particular industry they regulate. b. This may grant some additional power to the monopolist when it comes to asking for price increases. 2)The monopolist will be granted a “fair rate of return” over it’s costs, most of which will be capital. Example: No matter the firm’s per unit costs it will always receive a 5% return over those costs Cost can be difficult to establish. The firm has an incentive to exaggerate the cost of providing this product. Rate of Return: Reality problems • Since the monopolist is guaranteed a “fair rate of return” over their costs, they have no incentive to minimize costs... …the firm can purchase expensive machinery, staff, offices, etc that may not be necessary to produce this product... …the consumer will have to pick up the tab in the form of higher prices if the commission allows the price increase to go through (which it probably will if “taken over” by the firm). Benefits of a Monopoly? • Research and development of new technologies... ...without monopoly profits as an incentive firms may not spend resources to develop new technologies and goods. • Joseph Schumpeter : “Creative Destruction” Even if a firm has a Monopoly today, other firms will try to develop substitutes for the good and attempt to create their own monopoly. This “destroys” the old monopoly and “creates” a new one Ballpoint pens replaced fountain pens • If a firm is not protected from competition by the government it is increasingly difficult to maintain monopoly profits… …due to other firms developing substitute products.