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Monopoly Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing 1 What will I learn in this chapter? How a monopolist determines what price to charge and how much to produce to maximize profit or minimize loss 2 What puzzles will I learn to solve? • Why doesn’t the monopolist gouge consumers by charging the highest price? • How can price discrimination be fair? • Are medallion cabs in New York City monopolists? 3 What is a monopoly market structure? • Single seller • Unique product • Impossible entry into the market 4 What are the most common monopolies? Local monopolies are more common real-world approximations of the model than national or world market monopolies 5 What does it mean to have a unique product? There are no close substitutes for the monopolists product 6 What are some examples of impossible entry? • Owner of a vital resource • Legal barriers • Economies of scale 7 What is the advantage of economies of scale? Because of economies of scale, a single firm in an industry will produce output at a lower per-unit cost than two or more firms 8 What is a natural monopoly? An industry in which the long-run average cost of production declines throughout the entire market 9 What is unique about a natural monopoly? A single firm will produce output at a lower per-unit cost than two or more firms in the industry 10 What is a price maker? A firm that faces a downward-sloping demand curve 11 What is the difference between monopoly and perfect competition? The D and MR curves of the monopolist are downward sloping; in perfect competition they are horizontal 12 What is unique about the demand curve for a monopolist? The monopolist demand curve and the industry demand curve are one in the same 13 15 10 5 Cost per Unit (dollars) 40 35 30 25 20 Minimizing Costs in a Natural Monopoly 5 firms 2 firms 1 firm Quantity of Output 20 40 60 80 100 14 What determines price for a monopolist? Demand 15 Why is MR < P for all but the first unit of output? To sell additional units, the price has to be lowered; this price-cut applies to all units, not just the last unit 16 $-25 $-50 $-75 $-100 Price & Marginal Revenue $75 $50 $25 0 Monopoly 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 Q 17 $400 $200 Total Revenue $300 Monopoly $100 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 Q 18 Where does a monopolist produce to maximize profit or minimize losses? MR = MC 19 P $200 $175 $150 $125 $100 $75 $50 MC MR=MC ATC Profit AVC $25 D MR 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Q 20 P $200 $175 $150 $125 MC ATC MR=MC Loss $100 $75 $50 AVC $25 D MR 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Q 21 Can a monopolist make a profit in the long-run? If the positions of a monopolist’s demand and cost curves give it a profit and nothing disturbs these curves, it can make a profit in the long-run 22 What is price discrimination? The practice of a seller charging different prices for the same product not justified by cost differences 23 What is arbitrage? The practice of earning a profit by buying a good at a low price and reselling the good at a higher price 24 Is price discrimination unfair? Many buyers benefit from the discrimination by not being excluded from purchasing the product 25 Is monopoly efficient? A monopolist is inefficient because resources are underallocated to the production of its product 26 P - Price Discrimination Market for average students MR=MC T1 MC MR Q1 D Q 27 P - Price Discrimination Market for Superior Students MR=MC T2 MC MR Q2 D Q 28 Is perfect competition efficient? A perfectly competitive firm that produces where P = MC achieves an efficient allocation of resources 29 P Perfect Competition MR=MC MC MR, D Pc Qc Q 30 P Monopolist MR=MC MC Pm MR Qm D Q 31 How does monopoly harm consumers? It charges a higher price and produces a lower quantity than would be the case in a perfectly competitive situation 32 P Impact of Monopolizing and Industry MR=MC MC Pm Pc MR Qm Qc D Q 33 What is the case against monopoly? • Higher price • Charges a Price > MC • Long-run economic profit • Alters the distribution of income to favor monopolist 34 END 35