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Market Structures Mods 61-63: Monopolies • Intro to Monopolies • Monopoly is exact opposite of perfect competition • Monopoly – one supplier of a good • Demand curve for the firm = demand curve for the market Market Structure: Monopoly Market Structure: Monopoly • Increasing production by a monopolist • PC – firm has control over output but is a price-taker • Monopolists must deal with changing prices and their output level which EFFECT market price • Two Effects: • Quantity Effect – one more unit is sold, increasing TR by the price at which the unit is sold • Price Effect – in order to sell one more unit, the monopolist must cut market price on all units • Decreases TR Market Structure: Monopoly • Monopoly’s MR is ALWAYS below Demand • B/C of the price effect • Determining Price • First, figure out profit maximizing output (MR = MC), then focus on demand curve Market Structure: Monopoly • Then add in cost curves – can now find price, TC, TR, and profit Price Consumers Pay Optimal Point Total Cost Market Structure: Monopoly • Monopoly and Public Policy • Monopolies are considered incredibly inefficient • Losses to consumers due to monopolistic behavior is greater than the gains to the monopolist • Consumer surplus is lost, deadweight loss is introduced…but profit gained for the monopolist • Still losses outweight profit Market Structure: Monopoly • Monopolies detract from welfare of society as a whole – why gov’t prevent/break-up monopolies Market Structure: Monopoly • Natural Monopolies: • What makes a monopoly natural? • Monopoly in which increasing returns to scale ensure a bigger firm will have lower ATC • AKA – fixed costs are so high (railways, electrical grid, etc.) that barriers of entry are very high • Single producer is then most efficient (but still not necessarily equitable) Market Structure: Monopoly • Natural Monopoly Solutions • Public ownership – Post Office • Not a good solution, often becomes a political bargaining chip • Usually very inefficient • Regulation • Price regulations (usually forces the monopoly to make zero profit) • Price must cover ATC otherwise there is no incentive to produce Market Structure: Monopoly Price Regulation • Monopolies and Price Discrimination • Price Discrimination • Sell the same good at different prices • Can allow a monopolist to maximize profits • Ex: Airline tickets • Student travelers vs. business travelers Market Structure: Monopoly Market Structure: Monopoly • There is a different price elasticity for each group • Students are more susceptible to price changes • Perfect Price Discrimination • Each consumer is charged at exactly their willingness to pay • NO consumer surplus because it becomes profit for the monopoly Market Structure: Monopoly • In theory, the greater number of prices charged, the closer the monopoly is to perfect price discrimination • Almost never possible in real world • Cell phone plans • Common real would techniques to attempt PPD: • Advance Purchase Restrictions • Cheaper goods are bought earlier • Volume discounts • Large quantity = lower price • Two-Part Tariff System • Sam’s Club Market Structure: Monopoly Market Structure: Monopoly