Monopoly Flashcards
Show on the graph:
- Break even points
- Close down point
- Productive efficiency
- Revenue maximisation
- Allocative efficiency
- Profit maximisation
- Break even points: ATC = AR
- Close down point: AVC = MC
- Productive efficiency: ATC = MC
- Revenue maximisation: MR = 0
- Allocative efficiency: MC = AR
- Profit maximisation: MC = MR
monopoly
market where one firm dominates the market for a good that has no substitutes and where significant barriers to entry exist
Assumption monopoly:
- number of firms
- price control
- barriers to exit/entry
- product type
- dependence
- economic profit short run
- economic profit long run
- one
- significant (price maker)
- near total
- unique
- independent
- possible
- possible
market (monopoly) power
ability to set the price of the good
What are barriers to entry for monopolies?
- economies of scale (in order to compete with existing firms must produce at unachievable level of output at a reasonable cost)
- legal barriers (copyrights, patents)
- ownership of essential resources (e.g. large mining companies own richest mines)
- aggressive tactics (monopolies can buy out firms, can cut prices to below-cost levels to drive smaller firms with smaller profit reserves out)
demand curve for a monopoly
the firm is the industry so has downsloping market demand curve
monopolist limited by this demand curve
How to show profit and loss from cost curves?
- MC = MR is profit maximising point
- go straight up to demand curve
- go straight up to cost curve
- difference is economic profit/loss
Disadvantages of monopoly
Higher prices and lower quantity produced
- benefits producers and hurts consumers
- can harm relatively poor consumers the most especially if the good is a necessity
Producer welfare gains at the expense of consumers
- see graph
Incentive problems
- lack of innovation (from lack of competition)
- incentive to avoid competition (use aggressive tactics rather than innovating or lowering costs)
Advantages of monopoly
Economies of scale
- reduction of costs only achieved through massive output
- see graph
Higher profits enable greater research and development
- perfectly competitive firms only achieve profit in short run
- fewer resources available to improve development
Policies to regulate monopoly power
Natural monopoly
- governments grant exclusive production rights to firm and subsidies
- yield lower costs and more output for consumers
- public monopolies usually subject to regulation and government oversight
Anti-trust legislation
- laws that act against anti-competitive power