Pure Monopoly Mr. Bammel. Characteristics Single firm is the sole producer The product sold is...

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Pure Monopoly Mr. Bammel

Transcript of Pure Monopoly Mr. Bammel. Characteristics Single firm is the sole producer The product sold is...

Pure MonopolyMr. Bammel

Characteristics Single firm is the sole producer The product sold is unique and therefore has

no close substitutes; Control over total quantity supplied and thus

is a “price maker” Blocked entry due to economic,

technological, legal, or some other barrier; Nonprice Competition, using other aspects of

the product besides price to drive in the buyers;

Examples of Monopolies Majority are government-regulated public

utilities – natural gas, electric, water, cable TV, local telephone, etc.

Some companies are “near-monopolies” in which one firm controls the bulk of sales; Wham-O (throwing disks) De Beers (rough-cut diamonds)

*either way, there is almost always some competition.

Barriers to Entry Factors in the industry which block all

potential competition; in a Pure Monopoly, there is complete blocked entry;

Four prominent barriers: Economies of Scale Legal Barriers to Entry Ownership or Control of Essential Resources Pricing and other Strategic Barriers to Entry

Economies of Scale Reminder: As plant size increases, a number of

factors will for a time lead to lower average costs of production;

When dealing with a monopoly, when the long-run ATC is declining, only a single producer can produce any particular output at minimum total cost;

If a small industry tries to enter the market, because of economies of scale of the large industry, the small industry will be undercut because the larger industry can produce at a lower cost and therefore a lower price; the small industry still must charge a higher price to make a profit;

Economies of Scale

A larger firm can produce a larger output at a lower cost and therefore make a profit on a lower price;

A smaller firm entering the industry does not experience the economies of scale based off the output they produce; they must charge a higher price to make a profit;

Legal Barriers to Entry Patents: exclusive right of an inventor to

use, or to allow another to use, his or her invention;

Government seeks to protect the inventor from rivals who mean to take their design and make a profit;

Self sustaining patents is when a firm uses their own patent to continue to further strengthen the patent through more research and gain a market position;

Ownership or Control of Essential Resources Use private property as an obstacle to

potential rivals; Owning a resource essential in the

production of a product and not allowing rivals to purchase that resource;

Pricing and Other Strategic Barriers to Entry Monopolist creating their own barriers:

reducing the price, increasing advertising, etc.

Monopolist can be very creative in the barrier process;

Monopoly Demand Since the pure monopolist is the industry,

its demand curve will also represent the market demand curve; and is Down-sloping;

B/C of the down-sloping line, the monopolist can only increase the sales/output by decreasing the price; so this means that for every price, except the first, Marginal Revenue will be below the Demand curve;

Marginal Revenue below Price The lower price successively charged will now apply

to all prior units sold; So you lose money in the price but you gain money

in the total output produced with the new price; Each new unit sold increases total revenue by an

amount equal to its own price less the sum of the price cuts that apply to all prior units of output;

Thus, MR < P at every possible unit except the first; While TR increases, MR is positive; While TR decreases, MR is negative;

The Monopolist is the Price Maker Firms with a down-sloping line are price

makers; most evident in a pure monopoly;

So when a monopolist determines output to produce, they determine the price as well based off the demand line;

Setting price at the Elastic Region of Demand TR test

when demand is elastic, a decrease in price will increase TR;

When demand is inelastic, a decrease in price will decrease TR;

*a monopolist will never choose a price-quantity combination where a price reduction will cause a loss in TR;The lower TR and Higher Cost of increase output will lead monopolist to produce in the elastic region;

Profit Maximization of Pure Monopoly

Maximize Total Profits Same rationale as a profit seeking

competitive industry: MR = MC; The price charged will be the price on

the demand line matching up with the quantity of MR = MC;

Note: can still also use the Total Revenue vs Total Cost approach.

Pure Monopolist is without a Supply Curve No unique relationship of price and

quantity supplied because a monopolist merely finds the profit maximizing price;

The profits are dependent on the quantity demanded/price associated with the output of the point where MR = MC;

Misconceptions of Monopoly Not Highest Price: finding highest

profits; Total, Not Unit, Profit: max total profits,

not max unit profits; the extra units sold at lower price may generate a higher total profit than the high unit profit;

Partner up: Without using the Textbook Draw what a loss minimizing position

would look like on a graph. If a monopolist was in profit maximizing

position, what would be the factors that could bring the monopolist into a loss?

Reminder of Pure Competition

Efficiency In Monopoly, does society achieve

productive and allocative efficiency? Why not? Reminder:

Productive efficiency is P = Minimum ATC Allocative efficiency is P = MC

Deadweight Loss Because of the efficiency loss of a

monopoly, some units that should have been produced are not and the resources are directed elsewhere;

The total dollar value of the efficiency loss/deadweight loss is equal to the dollar value of the triangle created by demand, MC and MR;

Efficiency Loss of Monopoly

Income Transfer Basically a monopolist levies a “private

tax” on the consumer, which then ends up in the hands of the owners of the monopoly;

Income transferred is equal to the difference between price equilibrium and price charged by a monopolist multiplied by the units sold;

Cost Complications There are 4 reasons why cost may be

larger or smaller than pure competition: Economies of Scale X-Inefficiency Rent-Seeking Expenditures Technological Advancement

Examining Cost Get back with a partner:

One of you read about economies of scale and Technological Advancement

The Second needs to read about X-Inefficiency and Rent-Seeking Expenditures

Talk with each other and help fill in the notes for each of the 4 cost complications for a Monopoly.

Price Discrimination The practice of selling a specific product at

more than one price when the price differences are not justified by cost differences;

Possible under three conditions: Monopoly power: ability to control price and

output; Market Segregation: ability to segregate buyers

into distinct classes; No Resale: unable to resale item if part of class

buying for lower price;

Regulated Monopoly Being subject to rate (price) regulation;

Partner 1: read and interpret the graph associated with Price Discrimination on page 479. Be sure to understand how more profits and production is displayed and created through price discrimination;

Partner 2: Read and interpret the graph associated with a regulated monopoly on page 480. Be sure to understand the differences between a “socially optimal price” and a “fair-return price.” How will each of these appear graphically?