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Transcript of Chapter 8 - About people.tamu.edupeople.tamu.edu/~aglass/econ202/Chap008.pdf · 8-2 Learning...
Monopoly, Oligopoly, and Monopolistic Competition
Chapter 8
Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin
8-2
Learning Objectives1. Distinguish among three types of imperfectly
competitive industries and describe how imperfect competition differs from perfect competition
2. Identify the five sources of monopoly power and describe why economies of scale are the most enduring of the various sources of market power
3. Apply the concepts of marginal cost and marginal revenue to find the output and price that maximizes a monopolist's profits
4. Explain why the profit-maximizing output level for a monopolist is too small from society's perspective
5. Discuss why firms offer discounts to buyers who are willing to jump a hurdle
6. Discuss public policies that are often applied to natural monopolies
8-3
Imperfect Competition• Imperfectly competitive firms have some ability
to set their own price: they are price setters– Long-run economic profits possible– Reduce economic surplus
• Three types: 1. Monopoly has only one seller, no close
substitutes2. Monopolistic competition has many firms
producing slightly differentiated products that are reasonably close substitutes
3. Oligopoly has a small number of large firms producing products that are close substitutes
8-4
Monopolistic CompetitionMonopolistic Competition
Number of Firms Many firms
Price Limited flexibilityEntry and Exit FreeProduct DifferentiatedEconomic Profits Zero in long run
Decisions P, Q, product differentiation
Perfect Competition
Many firms
Price takerFree
Standardized
Zero in long run
Q only
8-5
OligopolyOligopoly
Number of Firms
Few firms, each large
Price Some flexibilityEntry and Exit Difficult
Product Differentiated or standardized
Economic Profits Possible
Decisions P, Q, differentiation, advertising
Perfect Competition
Many firms
Price taker
Free
Standardized
Zero in long run
Q only
8-6
Imperfect Competition• Examples of monopoly
– Electricity and Magic Cards• Examples of monopolistic competition
– Retail gas stations– Convenience stores
• Examples of oligopoly– Wireless phone service– Cement– Automobiles and tobacco
8-7
The Essential Difference• Market power is the firm's ability to raise its price
without losing all its sales• Any firm facing a downward sloping demand curve
– Firm picks P and Q on the demand curve• Market power comes from factors that limit
competition
Quantity
Pric
e
Imperfectly Competitive Firm
DQuantity
Pric
e
Perfectly Competitive Firm
D
8-8
Five Sources of Market Power1. Exclusive control over inputs2. Patents and copyrights3. Government licenses or franchises4. Economies of scale (natural monopolies)5. Network economies
8-9
Market Power: Economies of Scale
• Returns to scale refers to the percentage change in output from a given percentage change in ALL inputs
– Long-run idea– Constant returns to scale: doubling all inputs
doubles output– Increasing returns to scale: output increases by
a greater percentage than the increase in inputs• Average costs decrease as output increases• Natural monopoly: a monopoly that results from
economies of scale
8-10
Market Power: Network Economies
• Network economies occur when the value of the product increases as the number of users increases– VHS format for video tapes, Blu-ray for DVDs– Telephones– Windows operating system– eBay– Facebook and MySpace
8-11
Economies of Scale and Start-Up Costs
• New products can have a large fixed development cost
• Variable cost: sum of payments made to the variable factors, such as labor
• Fixed cost: sum of payments made to the fixed factors, such as capital
• Start-up costs can be thought of as a fixed cost• Average total cost (ATC): total cost divided by output• A good whose production has a large start-up cost and
low variable cost is subject to economies of scale– ATC declines sharply as output increases
8-12
Economies of Scale and Start-Up Costs
• Consider an example:• Assume marginal cost (M) is constant• Variable cost is M*Q• Total cost is fixed cost (F) plus variable cost
TC = F + M*Q– Total cost increases as output increases
• Average total cost is ATC = F / Q + M
– Average total cost decreases as output increases– Average fixed cost = F/Q
8-13
Economies of Scale
Quantity
Tota
l cos
t ($/
year
)
F
TC = F + M Q
Aver
age
cost
($/u
nit)
Quantity
ATC = F/Q + M
M
8-14
Example: Video Game Producers – Different Volumes
Nintendo PlaystationAnnual Production (000s) 1,000 1,200
Fixed Cost ($000s) $200 $200
Variable Cost ($000s) $800 $960
Total Cost ($000s) $1,000 $1,160
ATC per game $1.00 $0.97
8-15
Example: Video Game Producers – Lower Marginal Costs
Nintendo PlaystationAnnual Production (000s) 1,000 1,200
Fixed Cost ($000s) $200 $200
Variable Cost ($000s) $200 $240
Total Cost ($000s) $400 $440
ATC per game $0.40 $0.37
8-16
Example: Video Game Producers – Higher Fixed Cost
Nintendo PlaystationAnnual Production (000s) 1,000 1,200
Fixed Cost ($000s) $10,000 $10,000
Variable Cost ($000s) $200 $240
Total Cost ($000s) $10,200 $10,240
ATC per game $10.20 $8.53
8-17
Example: Video Game Producers –Different Production Levels
Nintendo PlaystationAnnual Production (000s) 500 1,700
Fixed Cost ($000s) $10,000 $10,000
Variable Cost ($000s) $100 $340
Total Cost ($000s) $10,100 $10,240
ATC per game $20.20 $6.08
8-18
Intel's Advantage• Development cost of a new chip $2 billion• Marginal cost of making a chip Pennies• Dominating the market Priceless• Intel supplies more than 80% of the processors
for PCs
8-19
Profit Maximization for the Monopolist
• Like all other firms, a monopolist:– Maximizes profits– Applies the Cost-Benefit Principle:
• Increase output if marginal benefit > marginal cost• Decrease output is marginal benefit < marginal cost
• Marginal benefit is called marginal revenue:– Change in total revenue from a one-unit change in
output– Equal to price for the perfectly competitive firm– Less than price for the monopolist
8-20
Pric
e ($
/uni
t)
Quantity (units/week)
Profit Maximization for the Monopolist
• To sell another unit the monopolist must lower price– Total revenue from 2 units = $12– Total revenue from 3 units = $15
• Marginal revenue = $3
D
2
6
3
5
8-21
Monopolist's Marginal Revenue
Total Revenue$12$15$16$15
Price Quantity$6 2$5 3$4 4$3 5
Pric
e &
mar
gina
l rev
enue
($/u
nit)
8
8
D
Quantity (units/week)MR
32
3
1
4-1 5
Marginal Revenue
31-1
8-22
Monopoly Demand and Marginal Revenue
• The monopolist's marginal revenue curve:– Has the same
intercept as the straight-line demand curve
– Has twice the slope of the demand curve
– Lies below the demand curve
Pric
e
Quantity
a
D
Q0Q0/2
a/2
MR
8-23
Deciding Quantity• Profit is maximized at the
level of output where marginal cost equals marginal revenue
• At P = $3 and Q = 12, MC > MR• Decrease output
– At Q = 8, MC = MR = 2• The demand curve sets the
price at P = $4– At any output below 8,
MC < MR
Pric
e ($
/uni
t of o
utpu
t)
Quantity (units/week)
3
MC
2
6
D
12
MR
4
8
8-24
Monopoly Profit• Profit = Total revenue – total cost• Total cost = ATC x Q• Profit = P x Q – ATC x Q• Profit = (P-ATC) x Q• If P > ATC then the firm earns a profit• If P < ATC then the firm suffers a loss• This can be graphically illustrated
8-25
Monopoly Losses and ProfitsP
rice
($/m
inut
e)
Minutes (millions/day)20
0.120.10 ATC
Economic loss= $400,000/day
D
0.05 MC
MR24
Pric
e ($
/min
ute)
Minutes (millions/day)2420
0.080.10
ATC
D
0.05 MC
MR
Economic profit= $400,000/day
8-26
The Invisible Hand FailsP
rice
($/u
nit o
f out
put)
Quantity (units/week)
The socially optimalamount occurs where
MC = MB, Q = 12 units and P = $3
The monopolist's optimalamount occurs where
MC = MR, Q = 8 units and P = $4
2MR
8
4
24
D
3
12
6 Marginal Cost
Deadweight loss from monopoly = $4
8-27
Monopoly and Perfect Competition
Monopoly
MC = MR
P >MRP > MC
Deadweight Loss
Perfect Competition
MC = MR
P = MRP = MC
No Deadweight Loss
8-28
Managing Monopoly: The Breakdown of the Invisible Hand• Monopolies exist for economic reasons
– Patents, copyrights, and innovation– Economies of scale– Network economies
• Anti-trust laws attempt to limit deadweight loss– Limiting monopoly has costs
• Patents encourage innovation• Economies of scale minimize ATC• Network economies increase benefits
8-29
Price Discrimination• Price discrimination means charging different
buyers different prices for essentially the same good or service– Separate the groups– No side trades among buyers
• Many forms of price discrimination– Hurdle method: discounts for identifiable groups
(e. g., students, AARP)– Perfect discrimination: negotiate separate deals
with each customer
8-30
Carla the Editor: Social Optimum
• Opportunity cost of Carla's time is $29
What is the social optimum?
What if Carla is a profit maximizer? What is Carla's total revenue?
Student Reservation Price
A $40 B 38C 36D 34E 32F 30G 28
Total Revenue
$40 $76
$108 $136 $160 $180 $196
6 papers with an economic profit of $6
8-31
Carla the Editor: Marginal Revenue
• Opportunity cost of Carla's time is $29
What is Carla's marginal revenue?
Student Reservation Price
A $40 B 38C 36D 34E 32F 30G 28
MR
$40 $36 $32 $28 $24 $20 $16
Total Revenue
$40 $76
$108 $136 $160 $180 $196
3 papers with an economic profit of $21
8-32
Carla the Editor: Price Discriminator
• Opportunity cost of Carla's time is $29
What if Carla is a perfect price discriminator?
What is Carla's total revenue?
Student Reservation Price
A $40 B 38C 36D 34E 32F 30G 28
Total Revenue
$40 $78 $114 $148 $180 $210 $238
6 papers with an economicprofit of $36
8-33
Hurdle Method of Price Discrimination
• The hurdle method of price discrimination is the practice of offering a discount to all buyers who overcome some obstacle.– Temporary sales– Hard cover and paperback books– Multiple car models from one manufacturer– Commercial air carriers– Movie producers and phased releases– Scratch and Dent appliance sales
8-34
Carla Offers a Rebate
• If reservation price < $36, student will mail in rebate
Student Reservation Price
Total Revenue
A $40 $40B 38 76C 36 108
Discounted Price SubmarketD $34 $34E 32 64F 30 90
MR
$403632
$343026
5 papers, price $36, rebate $4, economic profit $27
8-35
Carla's Choices
Program Social Optimum
Papers Edited 6
Price $30
Total Revenue $180
Carla's Time $174
Economic Profit $6
Total Surplus $26
Hurdle
5 = (3 + 2)
$36, $4 rebate
$172
$145
$27
$35
Perfect Discriminator
6
Reservation
$210
$174
$36
$36
Single Price
3
$36
$108
$87
$21
$27
8-36
Monopoly and Public Policy• Challenge: create the greatest increase in total
surplus• Policy options
– Government ownership and operation– Regulation– Competitive bids for natural monopoly services– Break up
8-37
State-Owned Natural Monopoly• Marginal cost is always less than average cost
– Marginal cost pricing produces losses• Options
– Fund losses from tax revenues– Fixed monthly fee plus usage fee
• Fixed fee covers losses
• Limited incentives to innovate and cut costs• Commonly used for water, Post Office, and some
electricity
8-38
Regulated Monopolies• Cost-plus regulation sets price at per unit
explicit costs plus a mark-up for implicit costs• Used for electricity, telephone, and cable
– Policies vary by state• Disadvantages
– High administrative cost– Reduced incentive for cost-saving innovation– Price is greater than marginal cost
8-39
Exclusive Contracting for Natural Monopolies
• Government awards contract to low bidder for natural monopoly services– Garbage collection, fire protection, road construction,
Department of Defense• Could achieve marginal cost pricing IF
government pays the resulting losses• Asset transfer for large fixed investment is
complex
8-40
Enforcement of Anti-Trust Laws• Two landmark laws
– Sherman Act of 1890• Declared conspiracy to create a monopoly illegal
– Clayton Act of 1914• Outlawed transactions that would "substantially lessen
competition"
• Applies to mergers and acquisitions today– IBM avoided break-up; AT&T did not– Microsoft survived
8-41
Another Policy Option: Ignore Monopoly
• Two objections to monopolies– Restrict output, decrease total surplus– Raise price, earn economic profits
• Analysis– Discount offers allow some customers to pay less
than average cost, though more than marginal cost• Economic profits generated by customers who pay
list price – their choice– About two-thirds of economic profits are taxed away
• Remainder accrues to shareholders
8-42
Imperfect Competition
Imperfect Competition
Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
Sources of Market Power
Monopoly
Public Policy
8-44
From Demand to Marginal Revenue
• Given a demand curve such as P = 15 – 2 Q
• We can write the marginal revenue curve as MR = 15 – 4 Q
• Suppose marginal cost is a line with zero intercept and a slope of 1
MC = Q
• The remaining step is to set marginal revenue equal to marginal cost