Topic 10: Monopoly and Market Power Flashcards
monopoly
single large price-setting firm where there are barriers to entry and exit
monopoly and FTWE
price-setter rather than taker so immediately nullifies FTWE
monopoly in the edgeworth box
unexploited gains from trade
- to realise them, A would have to change price-ratio which affects gains from trades from the resulting allocation
assumption that A sets a price ratio applying to all trades equally
socially efficient amount of production of a good
socially efficient to produce extra units of a good as long as marginal cost of the extra unit is less than what some consumer is willing to give up for that unit
monopolist optimal choice and social efficiency
monopolist produces less than is socially efficient
- effect on the price of inframarginal units means that profits are lower
price discrimination
first-degree/perfect: selling different units of output for different prices to different people
second-degree: selling different units of output for different prices but prices are the same if you buy the same amount
third-degree: selling output to different people at different prices but prices are the same for every unit sold to a given person
bundling
selling more than one good in a package
might help lower the AC of each component or that goods are complementary
might also be a way to exploit market power and extract surplus
general principle with market power
if you have price-setting power, you are more profitable with creative, non-uniform pricing
FTWE - what is lost in the general equilibrium system when there is market power
if an entity’s choices influence market price, FTWE fails
prevailing prices distorted away from the scarcity-signaling prices of competitive equilibrium