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C H A P T E R 10 Monopoly Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e O’Sullivan/Sheffrin Introduction to Monopoly • Read over the introductory paragraph on page 213 of your textbook. • Working with a partner, answer the big question: “Who is really paying for the scoreboard, and the student center?” © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Monopoly • Monopoly is a market in which a single firm serves the entire market. • Exists when there is a “barrier to entry” • Patent: The exclusive right to sell a particular good for some period of time. • Franchise or licensing scheme: A policy under which the government picks a single firm to sell a particular good. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Dragon’s Den © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Total Revenue and Marginal Revenue Demand, Total Revenue, and Marginal Revenue Price Quantity Sold $16 0 0 $14 1 $14 $14 $12 $10 $ 8 $ 6 2 3 4 5 $24 $30 $32 $30 10 6 2 -2 $ 4 6 $24 -6 © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Total Revenue Marginal Revenue Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Total Revenue and Marginal Revenue • As the firm cuts its price to sell more output, its total revenue rises for the first 4 units sold, but then decreases for the 5th and 6th units. • Marginal revenue (the change in total revenue from selling one more unit) is positive for the first 4 units and then becomes negative. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Demand Curve and Marginal Revenue Curve • Marginal revenue is equal to the price for the first unit sold, but is less than price for all other units sold. • To increase the quantity sold, a firm cuts its price and receives less revenue on the units that could have been sold at the higher price. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e The Marginal Principle and the Output Decision Marginal PRINCIPLE Increase the level of an activity if its marginal benefit exceeds its marginal cost; reduce the level of an activity if its marginal cost exceeds its marginal benefit. If possible, pick the level at which the activity’s marginal benefit equals its marginal cost. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Using the Marginal Principle to Pick a Price and Quantity Price Quantity Marginal Marginal Total (per Dose) sold (Doses) Revenue Cost Revenue Total Cost Profit $18 600 $12 $4.00 $10,800 $5,710 $5,090 $17 700 $10 $4.60 $11,900 $6,140 $5,760 $16 800 $8 $5.30 $12,800 $6,635 $6,165 $15 900 $6 $6.00 $13,500 $7,200 $6,300 $14 1,000 $4 $6.70 $14,000 $7,835 $6,165 $13 1,100 $2 $7.80 $14,300 $8,560 $5,740 $12 1,200 0 $9.00 $14,400 $9,400 $5,000 © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Monopolist Picks a Quantity and a Price • To maximize profit, the monopolist picks point n, where marginal revenue equals marginal cost. • The monopolist produces 900 doses per hour at a price of $15 (point m). • The average cost is $8 (point c). © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Monopolist Picks a Quantity and a Price • The marginal cost of the 600th dose is $4 as shown by point j on the marginal cost curve. • The extra revenue associated with dose number 600 is shown by point i on the marginal revenue curve, the marginal revenue is $12. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Monopoly Versus Perfect Competition • The market price under a monopoly will be higher then in a perfectly competitive market • This reduces market consumer surplus • Lose market efficiency! • Deadweight loss from monopoly: A measure of the inefficiency from monopoly; • The deadweight loss is equal to the difference between the consumer-surplus loss from monopoly pricing and the monopoly profit. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Deadweight Loss from Monopoly • A switch from perfect competition to monopoly increases the price from $8 to $18 and decreases the quantity sold from 400 to 200 doses. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e The Market Effects of Taxi Medallions Consumer surplus = area between demand curve and price © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Deadweight Loss from Monopoly • Consumer Surplus = area between demand curve and price © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Deadweight Loss from Monopoly • Consumer surplus decreases by an amount shown by the areas R and D, while profit increases by the amount shown by rectangle R. • The net loss to society is shown by triangle D (the deadweight loss of monopoly. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Rent Seeking: Using Resources to Get Monopoly Power • Rent Seeking: The process under which a firm spends money to persuade the government to erect barriers to entry and pick the firm as the monopolist. • Another source of inefficiency in a monopoly © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Natural Monopoly • A natural monopoly is a market in which the entry of a second firm would make price less than average cost, so a single firm serves the entire market. • The average-cost pricing policy is a regulatory policy under which the government picks the point on the demand curve at which price equals average cost. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e