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Transcript
Monopoly and Other Forms of
Imperfect Competition
1
Price Taker v. Price Setter
Perfectly Competitive Firm
A firm that must take the price in the
market
A price taker
Imperfectly Competitive Firm
A firm with at least some latitude to set its
own price
A price setter
2
Forms of Imperfect
Competition
Pure monopolist
A firm that’s the only supplier of a unique
product with no close substitutes
Oligopolist
A firm that produces a product for which only a
few rival firms produce close substitutes
Monopolistically competitive firm
One of a large number of firms that produce
slightly differentiated products that are
reasonably close substitutes for one another
3
Essential Difference
A perfectly competitive firm faces a perfectly
elastic demand curve for its product
Firms take the price in the market, where supply
and demand curves intersect
Charging a higher price or a lower price does not
help increase profits
An imperfectly competitive firm faces a
downward-sloping demand curve
Charging a price different from competitors may
be advantageous
4
Fig. 9.1
The Demand Curves Facing Perfectly
and Imperfectly Competitive Firms
5
Market Power
Market Power
A firm’s ability to raise the price of a good
without losing all its sales
It does not mean that a firm can sell any
quantity at any price it wishes. [If firms
raise price, quantity demanded falls.]
i.e. they must remember the law of demand
6
Sources of Market Power
Market power arises from factors that
limit competition = “barriers to entry”
Exclusive control over inputs
Economies of scale (lower average costs)
Patents
Grant exclusive rights for a specified time period
Promote monopoly but encourage innovation
Government licenses or franchises
7
Returns to Scale
Constant returns to scale
When all inputs are changed by a given
proportion and output changes by the
same proportion
Increasing returns to scale
When all inputs are changed by a given
proportion and output changes by a higher
proportion
Also know as Economies of Scale
8
Economies of Scale
With Economies of Scale
Average cost of production falls as output
increases
There are high start-up costs
There are low marginal costs
9
Fig. 9.2
Total and Average Costs for a
Production Process with Economies of
Scale
10
“Natural Monopoly”
In some markets, it makes more sense (is more
efficient) to only have a single provider of the
good.
Economies of scale are so great that the good or
service can be provided at the lowest cost if only
one firm provides it.
E.g. Utilities
How many sets of phone lines, water pipes, cable
wires, electric lines … do we need?
Since monopoly power is dangerous (to consumers)
what must we do with natural monopolies?
11
Profit Maximization
Goal of all firms: Maximize profits
Rule
Expand output when MR > MC
Decrease output when MC > MR
Sell the quantity of output where
marginal revenue equals marginal cost,
MR = MC
12
Fig. 9.3
The Profit-Maximizing Output Level for
a Perfectly Competitive Watermelon
Farmer
13
Monopolist’s
Marginal Revenue
Marginal Revenue
The change in a firm’s total revenue that
results from a one-unit change in output
For a monopolist
marginal benefit of selling an additional
unit is less than the market price
Note that a monopolist can only sell an additional unit if it cuts prices on all units it sells
14
Fig. 9.4
The Monopolist’s Benefit from Selling
an Additional Unit
15
Fig. 9.5
Marginal Revenue in Graphical Form
16
Fig. 9.6
The Marginal Revenue Curve for a
Monopolist with a
Straight-Line Demand Curve
17
Profit-Maximizing Rule
Profit is maximized at the level of
output for which MR = MC
A monopolist sets the price off of the
demand curve at its profit-maximizing
output
18
Fig. 9.9
The Monopolist’s Profit-Maximizing
Output Level
19
Fig. 9.11
The Deadweight Loss from Monopoly
20
Monopoly and Efficiency
Recall, the socially efficient level of
output is where MB = MC
The monopolist produces less than socially
efficient level of output
Monopolists are not efficient
Inefficiency is measured by deadweight loss
Monopoly may be socially inefficient,
but the alternatives, like legislation, are
not perfect either
21
Price Discrimination
Price Discrimination
The practice of charging different buyers
different prices for essentially the same
good or service
Discounts to senior citizens, children
Super-saver discounts on air travel
Rebate coupons on retail merchandise
Effective when the good or service
cannot be resold
22
Types of Price
Discrimination
Perfect price discrimination
A firm that charges each buyer exactly his
or her reservation price
Hurdle method of price discrimination
The practice by which a seller offers a
discount to all buyers who overcome some
obstacle
A rebate that takes time and effort to mail in
Time spent waiting
23
Benefits of Price
Discrimination
The number of trades increase
Brings output closer to the socially
efficient level
Reduces deadweight loss and increases
total economic surplus
24