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CHAPTER 9 MONOPOLY ANSWERS, SOLUTIONS, AND EXERCISES ANSWERS TO ONLINE REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. It is sometimes difficult to decide whether a firm is a monopoly because defining close substitutes for a particular product can be difficult. When there is just one seller of a good for which very few buyers could find a substitute, it is known as a perfect monopoly. Markets for electricity and natural gas often qualify as perfect monopolies (although these are in the process of becoming more competitive). 2. Monopolies arise because of barriers to entry such as economies of scale, control of a scarce input, or barriers created by government. Economies of scale over a very large range of output are a barrier to entry since they mean that one firm can produce at a lower cost per unit than can two or more firms. If a firm has control of a scarce input needed for production, other firms may not be able to enter that market. Finally, when a government believes that it is in the public’s interest to have a single seller, it will prevent entry. 3. The government can create a monopoly by awarding patents and copyrights and by granting legal and exclusive franchises. The government might award patents and copyrights to encourage firms and individuals to bear the costs and risks of innovation. Or, if the government believes that the market is a natural monopoly, it may grant a legal and exclusive franchise to a firm. 4. The CEO is wrong to believe that he can set any price he wants and sell as many units as he wants at that price. Once the CEO decides what price he wants to sell at, the demand curve will dictate how much output can be sold at that price. Conversely, the CEO may decide how much output he wants to sell, and the demand curve will give the maximum price at which he can sell that output. 5. False. A monopoly doesn’t have a supply curve because it is a price setter. 6. Unlike a perfectly competitive firm, a monopoly will not always shut down if price is less than AVC. If the monopoly provides goods or services considered vital, the government may not let it shut down. Also, the monopoly may not shut down if it views the situation of price less than AVC as temporary. For example, the monopoly may endure losses in the short run if it feels that doing so will promote the goodwill of its customers and profits in the long run. 7. A monopoly can earn an economic profit in the long run since there are barriers to entry that keep competitors from entering and driving down its profit. Under perfect competition, unhindered entry is what reduces economic profit to zero in the long run. 8. In perfect competition, the market supply curve gives the marginal cost of producing one more unit of output at each of the perfectly competitive firms. If a monopoly takes over, it will produce output at one of the previously competitive firms, and its marginal cost curve for producing that output will be the same as it was for the previously perfectly 104 competitive firms. Thus, the marginal cost for the monopoly will be the amount given by the competitive market supply curve. 9. To maximize profit, each firm produces where marginal revenue equals marginal cost. This means that firm A has a marginal revenue of 50 and firm B has a marginal revenue of 3 at the point of profit maximization. In perfect competition, price equals marginal revenue. Firm A is probably a perfectly competitive firm, since its price equals its marginal revenue. Firm B is probably a monopoly, since its price exceeds its marginal revenue. 10. For a given technology of production, monopolies charge higher prices and produce lower output than perfectly competitive firms. Monopolies may, however, be able to change the technology of production and shift down the marginal cost curve. This would cause prices to fall and output to increase. The net effect depends on the strength of each of these forces. 11. Government regulation and rent-seeking activities often drive the economic profits of monopolies to zero. Firms that are granted a government franchise must accept government regulation in return. The government may require the firm to submit prices to a public commission for approval. The commission will try to set prices so that economic profit is zero. Other firms may have to conduct costly rent-seeking activities to retain their monopoly status, thereby driving economic profits to zero. 12. A single-price monopoly charges the same price to everyone, while a pricediscriminating monopoly charges different prices to different customers for reasons other than differences in production costs. In order for a monopoly to price discriminate, it must face a downward-sloping demand curve; it must be able to identify consumers who are willing to pay more, and it must be able to prevent low-price consumers from reselling to high-price consumers. A downward-sloping demand curve means that there are some customers who are willing to pay for the product at a higher price. To charge some consumers a higher price, the firm must be able to identify those who are willing to do so. Finally, if low-price customers could resell the product to high-price customers, then no one would pay the high price to the firm, so price discrimination would be impossible. 13. False. If price discrimination lowers the price below what some consumers would pay under a single-price monopoly, then those consumers will benefit from price discrimination. PROBLEM SET 1. a. Number of Hot Dogs per Day 0 Total Cost $ 63 Marginal Cost $0.40 = ($73 – 63)/25 25 73 0.20 50 78 0.40 75 88 0.60 100 105 0.88 125 125 1.12 150 153 175 188 200 233 1.40 1.80 b. With marginal revenue of $1 per hot dog, the profit-maximizing quantity is found where MC is closest to $1 (without exceeding $1). That occurs with a quantity of 125 hot dogs per day. Selling 125 hot dogs at $1 each will generate total revenue of $125. From the table, the cost of producing that quantity is also $125. Therefore, profit will be zero. c. Number of Hot Dogs per Day 0 Total Cost $ 63 25 73 50 78 75 88 Marginal Cost Total Revenue $ 0 $0.40 $6.00 150 0.20 4.00 250 0.40 2.00 300 0.60 100 103 1.00 325 0.88 125 125 0.75 343.75 1.12 150 153 –0.25 337.5 1.40 175 188 –1.25 306.25 1.80 200 233 Marginal Revenue –2.25 250 d. As a monopolist, Zeke should choose the quantity at which MR is greater than, and most nearly equal to, MC. That is, he should sell 100 hot dogs per day and charge a price of $3.25 each. His profit would be ($3.25 x 100) – $103 = $222. e. From parts (b) and (d), we know that becoming a monopolist would enable Zeke to increase his daily profit from zero to $222. If the lobbyist can make him a monopolist at a cost of $200 per day, Zeke should take him up on it. In that case, Zeke’s daily profit would be $222 – $200 = $22, which is greater than the zero profit he would earn as a perfect competitor. 2. $ MC ATC P* D MR Q* Quantity The monopolist produces where marginal cost equals marginal revenue and charges P* dollars per unit. It makes a profit of zero since the ATC associated with Q* equals P*. 3. Using the figures given, we can compute marginal revenue and marginal cost. Q 100,000 TR 10,000,000 MR TC 2,000,000 60 200,000 16,000,000 10 3,000,000 20 300,000 18,000,000 20 5,000,000 –20 400,000 16,000,000 500,000 10,000,000 MC 40 9,000,000 –60 65 15,500,000 a. To maximize profit, Warmfuzzy should keep increasing output as long as marginal revenue exceeds marginal cost. It should produce 300,000 copies at $60 per book. b. Warmfuzzy’s maximum profit is $18,000,000 – $5,000,000 = $13,000,000. c. Total cost increases by $1,000,000 at each level. The new total cost and marginal cost figures are TC MC 3,000,000 10 4,000,000 20 6,000,000 40 10,000,000 65 16,500,000 Although total cost has increased, marginal cost has not changed, and marginal revenue is unaffected. Warmfuzzy should still publish 300,000 copies. (Warmfuzzy’s profit under this new scenario will fall to $12,000,000.) 4. The marginal revenue curve was drawn under the assumption that No-Choice Airline charges a single price. When No-Choice begins charging two different prices, there is a different marginal revenue curve. Firms still equate MR and MC to find output, but with price discrimination, marginal revenue is different for different types of consumers. Equating MR and MC for the different types of consumers will give the level of output that the firm should allocate to each type. 5. a. Price Number of Total Cost Visits $200 2 Marginal Cost $100 Total Revenue $400 $50 $175 3 $150 $125 $525 $50 $150 5 $250 $112.50 $750 $50 $125 8 $400 $83.33 $1000 $50 $100 12 $600 $50 $1200 $50 $75 18 $900 $25 $1350 $50 $50 23 $1150 -$40 $1150 $50 $25 25 $1250 Marginal Revenue -$262.50 $625 The doctor will charge $125 per patient and see 8 patients per day or she will charge $100 per patient and see 12 patients per day. b. If the doctor can perfectly price discriminate, her marginal revenue curve is the same as her demand curve. She will see 23 patients per day. 6. a. You will tutor two students, and will charge them each $35, for total weekly earnings of $70. b. You will tutor four students, charging each student the highest price they are willing to pay. That is, you will charge prices of $40, $35, $27, and $26. Your total weekly earnings will be $128. c. No, because your total revenue ($70) from two students will be less than your total cost ($75). d. Yes, because your total revenue ($128) from these four students will be more than your total cost ($125). 7. Your graph should show output (Q*) where MC and MR intersect. At Q*, the ATC curve should lie above the demand curve, but the AVC curve should lie below the demand curve. Because P > AVC, the firm will stay open in the short run. But because P < ATC, the firm will exit in the long run. $ MC ATC AVC D Q* MR Quantity A technological change that lowers only the monopolist's fixed cost would cause the ATC curve to shift downward, but leave all other curves unaffected. In the graph below, if the ATC curve shifts down to the curve labeled "ATC," the firm would break even, and be indifferent between exiting or staying in the industry in the long run. If the ATC curve shifts down to the curve labeled ATC2, the firm would make a profit, and would not exit in the long run. 8. a. Output Price 0 $5.60 Total Revenue $0 1 $5.50 $5.50 2 $5.40 $10.80 3 $5.30 $15.90 Marginal Revenue Total Cost $0.50 $5.50 $3.00 $1.95 $1.00 $20.80 $6.90 $25.50 $5.05 $8.90 $30.30 $4.90 $34.30 $16.60 $4.50 $13.40 $4.00 7 $13.90 $2.00 $4.80 6 = Q* $9.45 $0.45 $4.70 $5.10 $5.35 $6.45 $4.90 5 $2.00 $5.45 $5.10 $5.20 Profit -$0.50 $3.50 $5.30 4 Marginal Cost $16.90 $7.00 $20.40 The firm will produce 6 units of output and will earn a profit of $16.90. $13.90 b. Output Price 0 $5.60 Total Revenue $0 Marginal Revenue Total Cost $0.50 $5.50 1 $5.50 $5.50 $5.40 $5.30 $15.90 4 $5.20 $20.80 5 = Q* $5.10 $25.50 6 $5.05 $30.30 $7.45 $9.45 $6.45 $1.45 $10.90 $4.70 $9.90 $3.00 $13.90 $4.80 $11.60 $5.50 $19.40 $4.00 $4.90 $3.35 $2.00 $4.90 7 $1.00 $2.95 $5.10 3 -$0.50 $4.50 $10.80 $34.30 Profit $4.00 $5.30 2 Marginal Cost $10.90 $8.00 $27.40 $6.90 The firm will produce 5 units of output and will earn a profit of $11.60. c. Output Price 0 $5.60 Total Revenue $0 1 $5.50 $5.50 2 $5.40 $10.80 Marginal Revenue Total Cost $0.50 $5.50 $2.60 $1.55 $15.90 $5.20 $5.25 $20.80 $5.10 $25.50 6 = Q* $5.05 $30.30 7 $4.90 $34.30 $10.65 $0.05 $5.30 $4.70 5 $6.15 $0.60 $4.90 4 $2.40 $4.65 $5.10 $5.30 Profit -$0.50 $3.10 $5.30 3 Marginal Cost $15.50 $1.60 $6.90 $4.80 $18.60 $4.10 $11.00 $4.00 $19.30 $6.60 $17.60 $16.70 The firm will produce 6 units of output, as in part a, but will earn a profit of $19.30. 9. If the price of using a fixed input rises, the monopolist’s average total cost curve will shift upward. But marginal cost, which is the change in variable cost as quantity varies, will be unaffected. Similarly, average variable cost will be unaffected. Because marginal cost and marginal revenue are unaffected, the short-run profit-maximizing price and quantity will be unchanged. 10. a. As a monopolist, Patty will maximize her profit by producing the output at which MC = MR. We know that MC = $0.50 per swimmer. From Table 1, admitting the sixth swimmer has a MR = $2, so it makes sense to admit that person. What about the seventh? Again, from the table, we see that MR = $0. With a marginal cost of $0.50, Patty would suffer a decline in profit by admitting that person. So, Q = 6 is the profit-maximizing output level. At Q = 6, the admission fee would be $7 per swimmer. Table 1 indicates that TR = $42. TC = TFC + TVC = $25 + (6 x $0.50) = $28. So, profit = $42 – $28 = $14. (Note that at Q = 7, TR = $42, TC = $25 + (7 x $0.50) = $28.50. so profit would be be lower at $13.50). b. The excise tax would affect Patty’s marginal cost – raising it by $2 to $2.50 per swimmer. As in part (a), she maximizes profit by setting MC = MR. This would require an output of 5 swimmers per day (because a sixth would lower MR to $2, which is less than marginal cost with the excise tax). With Q = 5, she will charge $8 per swimmer, resulting in a total revenue of TR = $40 per day. Total cost is TC = TFC + TVC = $25 + (5 x $2.50) = $37.50. Profit would be $40 – 37.50 = $2.50 per day. c. The swimming tax would raise Patty’s fixed costs to FC = $25 + $2 = $27 per day. It would not affect marginal cost, and therefore would not affect her optimal choice of output. Her profit-maximizing output level would be Q = 5 and the corresponding admission fee would be $8/swimmer. What about profit? TR would still be $40 per day. But now, TC = TFC + TVC = $27 + (5 x $2.50) = $39.50. Her profit would now fall to $0.50 per day. d. As in part (c), marginal cost would not be affected, but fixed cost would increase to $25 + $5 = $30 per day. If she chose the profit-maximizing output level, she would admit 5 swimmers per day and charge them $8 each for admission. Profit would now be determined by comparing TR = $40 with TC = TFC + TVC = $30 + (5 x $2.50) = $42.50. She would suffer a loss of $2.50 per day. e. In the short run, Patty will continue to operate because her TR of $40 per day exceeds her TVC of $30 per day. Also, from a profit perspective, It is better for her to lose $2.50 per day than to shut down and suffer a daily loss equal to her TFC of $30 per day. In the long run, however, she will be better off leaving this industry. f. The first statement is true. The excise tax was $2 per swimmer, but it resulted in Patty raising her admission fee from $7 to $8 per person. The tax of $2 was shared between consumers (who paid $1 more per admission) and the producer (whose marginal revenue net of the tax fell from $7 to $6). The second statement is not true as stated. A fixed tax has no effect on monopoly unless it is so large as to create a kiss and cause the firm to exit in the long run. MORE CHALLENGING QUESTIONS 11. a. With MC = $5, Patty will determine her profit-maximizing output rate by setting MC = MR. From Table 1, we can see that she will admit Q = 5 swimmers per day, charging each of them an $8 admission fee. Her profit would be TR – TFC – TVC = $40 – $24 – (5 x $5) = $40 – $49 = a loss of $9 per day. To determine whether she should shut down, we can use the shutdown rule, comparing her TR = $40 to her TVC = $24. Because TR > TVC, she will continue to operate in the short run, because she would be covering all her variable cost and part of her fixed cost. Shutting down would entail a larger loss equal to her fixed cost of $24 per day. In the long run, however, she will leave this industry. b. The demand curve provides information about potential swimmers’ willingness to pay for admission. Specifically, we can see that some swimmer is willing to pay as much as $12 to swim. A second swimmer is willing to pay $11, a third is willing to pay $10 … down to an eight person willing to pay $5, but no more. Using this information, and assuming that Patty can determine which swimmers are willing to pay at least $8 per day and which are willing to pay $5 per day (but less than $8), she can adjust her pricing according. She will charge $8 to the “first” 5 swimmers and $5 per day to the “next” 3 swimmers. In this case, she will admit Q = 8 swimmers. Under this pricing scheme, her TR = (5 x $8) + (3 x $5) = $40 + 15 = $55. TC = TFC + TVC = $24 + (8 x $5) = $64. Her loss would be $9 per day, so as in part (a) she will continue to operate in the short run, but leave the industry as soon as she can. c. By analogy to the reasoning in part (b), Patty would charge a price of $10 to the “first” 3 swimmers, $8 to the next 2, and $5 to another 3 swimmers. She would admit a total of 8 swimmers per day, thereby generating TR = (3 x $10) + (2 x $8) + (3 x $5) = $30 + $16 + $15 = $61. TC would still be $64, so Patty would now lose $3 per day. She will continue to operate in both the short run, but leave the industry in the long run. d. Under perfect price discrimination, Patty will charge each swimmer the maximum amount he or she would be willing to pay. To determine how many swimmers to admit, she would look for the quantity at which a horizontal MC = $5 curve crosses the demand curve. That would be Q = 8 swimmers per day. Her total daily cost would still be $64 per day. But now, her TR = $12 + $11 + $10 + $9 + $8 + $7 + $6 + $5 = $68 per day. If she can practice perfect price discrimination, she can earn a profit of $4 per day and she willl be happy to continue operating in both the short run and the long run. 12. Setting MR = 20 – 8Q and MC = Q2 equal to each other, we have 20 – 8Q = Q2, or Q2 + 8Q – 20 = 0. This is a quadratic equation with solution Q = 2.