1 / 12

Unit Three: Product Markets

Unit Three: Product Markets. Topic: Pure Monopoly. Learning Targets. I will be able to demonstrate how a monopoly firm is a price-maker, and how it determines output in order to maximize profits or minimize losses.

kelda
Download Presentation

Unit Three: Product Markets

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit Three: Product Markets Topic: Pure Monopoly

  2. Learning Targets • I will be able to demonstrate how a monopoly firm is a price-maker, and how it determines output in order to maximize profits or minimize losses. • I will be able to explain the differing conditions for a price-discriminating monopolist and a regulated monopoly.

  3. Characteristics • Single seller • No close substitutes • “Price-maker” • Barriers to entry • Economies of scale (decreasing ATC) • Patents, licenses, etc. • Ownership or control of resources • Strategy pricing • Little or no advertising

  4. “Price-Maker” • Def: the firm determines its price because it is the industry. • Demand curve follows the law of demand (downward-sloping). • MR < P (b/c monopoly can only increase sales by decreasing price), therefore, MR < D. (draw) • Will set price in the elastic region of demand in order to affect TR.

  5. Misconceptions • Monopolies charge the highest price. • Not true, b/c monopolies want the highest profit, and some prices will yield lower profits. • Monopolies don’t have losses. • Not true, b/c some prices will yield lower (negative) profits.

  6. SR Profit-Maximization: MR/MC Approach • The optimum quantity to produce (Q1) is where MR = MC. (draw) • P1 at demand curve (at level of Q1) • The area of profit is from where the Q1 crosses the ATC up to the price. (draw) • No supply curve (b/c no unique relationship between price and QS due to the fact that P does not equal MR).

  7. Other SR Situations • Loss-minimization: use the MR/MC approach. (draw) • Shut-down: same; P < AVC • Long-run equilibrium: n/a

  8. Compared to Pure Competition • Monopolist charges higher price and produces a smaller output. • Monopolist is less efficient. • Costs differ because of: • Economies of scale (specialization easier in monopoly) • X-inefficiency (monopoly chooses not to operate at lowest ATC, which reduces profits) • Rent-seeking behavior (removing excesses from competition) • Technological advances (little incentive for monopolist or they use it as a barrier)

  9. Efficiency • Productive: least-cost occurs when P = minimum ATC. • Allocative: best-mix occurs when P = MC (if P > MC, resources are being underallocated to the good; if P < MC, resources are being overallocated to the good) • A monopolist is inefficient; it has neither type of efficiency (P > min. ATC and P > MC).

  10. Price-Discriminating Monopolist • Monopolist charges different prices to different groups of buyers. • This means that the MR curve is on the D curve because the monopolist will charge each group the highest possible price. • Conditions for discrimination: monopoly power and no option for re-sale. • They can earn more profits and can produce more.

  11. Regulated Monopoly • Gov’t can regulate monopolies (or dissolve them completely). • Two ways to regulate (draw): • Fair-return price: P (demand curve) = ATC • Socially-optimal price: P (demand curve) = MC • Dilemma of regulation: • Fair-return price allows monopolies to cover costs, but does not allow for a significant increase in production or allocative efficiency. • Socially-optimal creates losses, but does allow for allocative efficiency and increased production.

  12. YOU MUST REMEMBER: • Price-maker; MR lies below demand curve. • Q1 is at MR=MC. • P1 is at the demand curve for Q1. • Profit/loss is at Q1 between D and ATC. • NO efficiency! • Produces less at a higher price than a purely competitive firm.

More Related