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Chapter 8 Monopoly Market Structures Perfect competition Imperfect competition – Monopoly – Oligopoly – Monopolistic competition Imperfect Competition Perfect Competition – An ideal market that maximizes economic surplus – A situation that does not always exist Imperfect competition – – – – – Have some control over price Price may be greater than the cost of production Long-run economic profits are possible Reduce economic surplus to varying degrees Are very common The Essential Difference The perfectly competitive firm faces a perfectly elastic demand for its product. The imperfectly competitive firm faces a downward-sloping demand curve. In perfect competition Supply and demand determine equilibrium price. The firm has no market power. At the equilibrium price, the firm sells all it wishes. If the firm raises its price, sales will be zero. If the firm lowers its price, sales will not increase. The firm’s demand curve is the horizontal line at the market price. In Imperfect Competition The firm has some control over price or some market power. The firm faces a downward sloping demand curve. The Demand Curves Facing Perfectly and Imperfectly Competitive Firms Perfect Competition vs.Monopoly Many buyers and sellers Only one seller of a unique product with no close substitute Homogeneous product Free entry and exit Barrier to entry Market Power Market Power: Definition If a firm can raise the price of its product (above market equilibrium price) without losing all of its sales, then the firm has market power. A firm’s ability to raise the price of a good without losing all its sales What a Monopolist Does Five Sources of Market Power (barriers to entry) Exclusive control over inputs Patents and Copyrights Government Licenses or Franchises Network Economies Economies of Scale (Natural Monopolies) Natural Monopoly Firms with economies of scale – Average total cost declines sharply as output increases • large fixed costs • low variable costs • low marginal costs Total and Average Total Costs for a Production Process with Economies of Scale Market Power: Measurement Elasticity of demand: E = (ΔQ/Q)/(ΔP/P) The less elastic is the demand for the firm’s product, the more market power the firm has. Market Power: Measurement Cross-Price Elasticity: Exy=(ΔQx/Qx)/(ΔPy/Py). The lower the cross-price elasticity (the lower the degree of substitution), the larger the market power. Short-Run Decision Concerning output level Goal: maximize profit Demand facing the industry is the demand facing the firm: downward sloping MR below D Short-Run Decision Concerning output level Rule: produce at MR=MC. Positive Economic Profit: when P>ATC at MR=MC Operating at a loss: when AVC<P<ATC at MR=MC ShutDown: when P<AVC at MR=MC Short-Run Equilibrium: Monopoly P MC ATC G AVC E MR O M D Q Principles: MC tells how much to produce (produce up to the amount where MR=MC) ATC tells how much profit or loss is made if the firm decides to produce (profit = (P - ATC)Q). AVC tells whether to produce (keep producing only when P>AVC at MR=MC) The Monopolist’s Profit Profit = TR − TC = (PM × QM) − (ATCM × QM) = (PM − ATCM) × QM Monopoly versus Perfect Competition profit-maximizing quantity of output P = MR = MC for perfectly competitive firm P > MR = MC for monopolist Compared with a competitive industry, a monopolist Produces a smaller quantity: QM < QC Charges a higher price: PM > PC Earns a monopoly profit The Monopolist’s Benefit from SellingFigure an 10.3 Additional Unit • If P = $6, then TR = $6 x 2 = $12 $6,then thenTR TR= =$5$6x x3 2= =$15 $12 • If• IfPP= =$5, • If PMR = $5, TRthe = $5 3 = $15 • The of then selling 3rdxunit = $3 (15-12) • The MR selling unit = $3 (15-12) • For the 3rdofunit, MR the = $33rd <P = $5 • For the 3rd unit, MR = $3 < P = $5 5 5 3 3 Marginal Revenue in Graphical Form P Q TR 6 2 12 5 3 15 4 4 16 3 5 15 MR 3 1 -1 Observations – MR is the change between two quantities – MR < P – MR declines as quantity increases – MR < P because price must be lowered to sell an additional unit Figure 10.4 Marginal Revenue in Graphical Form The Marginal Revenue Curve for a Monopolist with a Straight-Line Demand Curve Figure 10.5 Observations The vertical intercept, a, is the same for MR and D The horizontal intercept for MR, Q0/2, is one half the demand intercept, Q0. The Demand and Marginal Cost Curves for a Monopolist Figure 10.6 The Monopolists Profit-Maximizing Output Level Figure 10.7 Even a Monopolist May Suffer an Economic Loss Figure 10.8 The Demand and Marginal Cost Curves for a Monopolist Figure 10.9 The Deadweight Loss from Monopoly Figure 10.10 Monopoly Causes Inefficiency Preventing Monopoly Non-natural monopoly (not caused by economy of scale): antitrust prevention; break up; Natural Monopoly: public ownership – cost, quality, politics price regulation Regulated and Unregulated Natural Monopoly Even a Monopolist May Suffer Figure 10.8 an Economic Loss