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Chapter 17 Monopoly 1* Market Power In many situations, competition is not intense A firm has market power when it can profitably charge a price that is above its marginal cost Most firms have some market power, though it may be very slight Depends on whether their competitors’ products are close substitutes Two market structures in which firms have market power: A monopoly market has a single seller An oligopoly market has a few, but not many, producers 3* How Do Firms Become Monopolists? Firms get to be monopolists in various ways: Government grants a monopoly position to a firm (cable TV companies in local communities, drug patents) Economies of scale (concrete supply in a small town) Being first to produce a new product (iPod) Owning all of an essential input (De Beers diamond producer) 4* Figure 17.1: Scale Economies and Monopoly Monopolist can make a profit because AC lies below the demand curve at some quantities Two firms cannot make positive profits AC lies above Dhalf for all quantities * Monopoly Pricing Monopolist will choose the price that maximizes its profit, given the demand for its product Whenever the firm’s profit-maximizing sales quantity is positive, marginal revenue equals marginal cost at that sales quantity Marginal cost curve applies as usual Need to examine the shape of the marginal revenue curve Recall that a firm’s marginal revenue curve captures the additional revenue it gets from the marginal units it sells, measured on a per-unit basis 6* Marginal Revenue for a Monopolist An increase in sales quantity (Q) changes revenue in two ways Firm sells Q additional units of output, each at a price of P(Q), the output expansion effect Firm also has to lower price as dictated by the demand curve; reduces revenue earned from the original (Q-Q) units of output, the price reduction effect The overall effect on marginal revenue is: So the price reduction effect makes the monopolist’s marginal revenue less than price 7* Figure 17.2: Marginal Revenue and Price * Monopoly Profit Maximization When a monopolist maximizes its profit by selling a positive amount, its marginal revenue must equal its marginal cost at that quantity If marginal revenue exceeded marginal cost the firm would be better off selling more If marginal revenue were less than marginal cost the firm would be better off selling less Two-step procedure for finding the profit-maximizing sales quantity Step 1: Quantity Rule Identify positive sales quantities at which MR=MC If more than one, find one with highest profit Step 2: Shut-Down Rule Check whether the quantity from Step 1 yields higher profit than shutting down 9* Figure 17.4: Monopoly Profit Maximization * Markup A monopolist facing a downward sloping demand curve will set its P above MC Firm in a perfectly competitive market sets price = MC, meaning that the firm has no market power Extent to which P exceeds MC is a measure of monopolist’s market power A firm’s markup, price-cost margin, or Lerner index equals the difference between its P and its MC, as a % of its P 11 * Markup A monopolist’s markup at its profit-maximizing P always equals the reciprocal of the elasticity of demand, times negative one The less elastic the demand curve, the greater the firm’s markup over its marginal cost When demand is less elastic, raising the price is more attractive because fewer sales are lost This also implies that demand must be elastic at the profit-maximizing price 12 * Welfare Effects of Monopoly Pricing By charging a P above MC, the monopolist makes consumers worse off than under perfect competition Consumers who buy the product pay more for it Some who would have bought it under perfect competition will not buy it at the higher price Welfare effects of monopoly pricing: Firm gains Consumers lose Deadweight loss incurred Deadweight loss from monopoly pricing is the amount by which aggregate surplus falls short of its maximum possible level, which is attained in a competitive market 13 * Figure 17.5: Welfare Effects of Monopoly Pricing * Distinguishing Monopoly from Perfect Competition Existence of more than one firm in a market does not guarantee perfect competition How can we tell whether multiple firms in a market are behaving like price takers or colluding and acting like a monopoly? Easy to answer if we could observe MCs and compare to P Monopolists and perfectly competitive industries behave differently in responses to changes in demand and changes in costs 15 * Response to Changes in Demand Monopolist’s profit-maximizing price depends on elasticity of demand Price in perfectly competitive market depends on level of demand If elasticity of demand changes but level of demand does not, provides a way to distinguish between market structures 16 * Figure 17.7: Response to a Change in Demand * Response to Changes in Cost How do monopolies and perfectly competitive markets differ in their response to changes in costs? Consider the case of a marginal cost increase by a given amount at every level of output Example: a specific tax, T, on firms The pass-through rate is the increase in P that occurs in response to a small increase in MC, measured per dollar of increase in MC In a competitive market, the pass-through rate is never greater than one (cannot increase P by more than T) The monopolist’s pass-through rate depends on the shape of the D curve Can be greater than one with a constant-elasticity demand curve: 18 * P=(Ed / (Ed+1)) MC or: PM is a multiple of its MC if Ed=-2, then P=2MC 19 * Price Paid by Consumers ($/gallon) Effects of a Specific Tax – Shifting the Supply Curve ST Increase in Consumer Cost per Gallon S Po + T Pb B T A Po Ps = Pb - T Decrease in Firms’ Receipts per Gallon D QT Qo * Gallons of Gas per Month Nonprice Effects of Monopoly: Product Quality Product quality is a decision firms make Raising a product’s quality increases the consumer’s willingness to pay Producing a higher-quality product usually costs more The firm must decide whether the extra benefit is worth the extra cost How does the quality provided by a monopolist compare to the level that would maximize aggregate surplus? If different consumers value quality differently, the monopolist may not choose to offer the quality that maximizes aggregate surplus May over- or under-produce quality 21 * Nonprice Effects of Monopoly: Advertising Spending on advertising is another important decision for many firms Because the monopolist’s marginal cost is less than the price, each additional sale increases its profit Firms in perfectly competitive markets have no individual incentive to advertise Each firm perceives itself as capable of selling as much as its desires at the market price Marginal benefit of advertising equals the increase in sales times the firm’s profit on additional sales At the profit-maximizing level of advertising, this marginal benefit must equal the extra dollar expended For a monopolist, the ratio of the amount spend on advertising to the firm’s total sales revenue, the advertising-sales ratio, equals the advertising elasticity divided by the elasticity of demand, times negative one 22 * Nonprice Effects of Monopoly: Investments Firms can also make investments in an effort to become a monopolist Example: cable TV firms lobbying government officials to award them franchises If firms compete to become a monopolist, they will spend up to the full monopoly profit less avoidable fixed costs If spend on socially wasteful things (e.g., golf outings for local officials) the loss from monopoly may be larger than deadweight loss and include all monopoly profit Rent seeking is socially useless effort devoted to securing a monopoly position Welfare effects of monopoly need not always be so bad Expenditures firms make to gain monopoly positions can be socially valuable (e.g., R&D spending in the search for patentable drugs) 23 * Monopsony Read monopsony section: p:648-652 24 * Regulation of Monopolies Deadweight loss from monopoly pricing provides a justification for government intervention Government actions that keep prices closer to MC can protect consumers and increase economic efficiency Intervention can take many forms Antitrust legislation (see Chapter 19) Direct regulation of prices Price regulation (not common in U.S. today) More prevalent in the past Still used for electricity, natural gas, local telephone service More common in some other countries 25 * Why Are Some Monopolies Regulated? Regulation arises out of political pressure and economic concern about market dominance When governments create monopolies they may then regulate them to deal with the negative consequences May create a monopoly to ensure that goods are produced at least cost A market is a natural monopoly when a good is produced most economically through a single firm Average cost falls as quantity increases Second firm may enter but this would cause costs to rise Government can designate one firm to be the provider Institute price regulation to protect consumers 26 * Figure 17.11: A Natural Monopoly *