Monopoly Power Flashcards
Pure Monopoly
A pure monopoly is defined as a single seller of a product, i.e. 100% of market share.
Monopoly power
In the UK a firm is said to have monopoly power if it has more than 25% of the market share. For example, Tesco @30% market share or Google 90% of search engine traffic.
Problems with monopolies: Higher prices
Firms with monopoly power can set higher prices (Pm) than in a competitive market (Pc).
Allocative inefficiency.
A monopoly is allocatively inefficient because in monopoly (at Qm) the price is greater than MC. (P > MC). In a competitive market, the price would be lower and more consumers would benefit from buying the good. A monopoly results in dead-weight welfare loss
Productive inefficiency
A monopoly is productively inefficient because the output does not occur at the lowest point on the AC curve.
X – Inefficiency
It is argued that a monopoly has less incentive to cut costs because it doesn’t face competition from other firms.Therefore the AC curve is higher than it should be.
Supernormal Profit
A monopolist makes Supernormal Profit Qm * (AR – AC ) leading to an unequal distribution of income in society.
Higher prices to suppliers
A monopoly may use its market power (monopsony power) and pay lower prices to its suppliers. E.g. supermarkets have been criticised for paying low prices to farmers. This is because farmers have little alternative but to supply supermarkets who have dominant buying power.
Diseconomies of scale
It is possible that if a monopoly gets too big it may experience dis-economies of scale. – higher average costs because it gets too big and difficult to coordinate.
Lack of incentives
A monopoly faces a lack of competition, and therefore, it may have less incentive to work at product innovation and develop better products.
Lack of choice
Consumers in a monopoly market face a lack of choice. In some markets – clothing, choice is as important as price
Advantages of monopolies: Economies of scale
If there are significant economies of scale, a monopoly can benefit from lower average costs. This can lead to lower prices for consumers.
Research & Development
Monopolies make supernormal profit which can be invested in Research & Development. This is important for industries like medical drugs which require a lot of risky investment. In many industries which require substantial investment – a competitive industry with many small firms would be unsuitable.
Global competition
A domestic monopoly may face competition from abroad, and therefore what may appear as a monopoly may still face competitive pressures. Also, a monopoly may face competition from related industries, e.g. Eurotunnel has a monopoly on train services from London to Paris, but faces competition from airlines.
Advantages of Monopolies: Research and development.
Monopolies can make supernormal profit, which can be used to fund high-cost capital investment spending. Successful research can be used for improved products and lower costs in the long term. This is important for industries like telecommunications, aeroplane manufacture and pharmaceuticals. Without monopoly power that a patent gives, there may be less development of medical drugs. In developing drugs, there is a high risk of failure; monopoly profits give a firm greater confidence to take risks and fund research which may prove futile.