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Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Four. Monopoly. Pure Monopoly. A monopolized market has a single seller. The monopolist’s demand curve is the (downward sloping) market demand curve. So the monopolist can alter the market price by adjusting its output level. Pure Monopoly. $/output unit.

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Chapter Twenty-Four

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  1. Chapter Twenty-Four Monopoly

  2. Pure Monopoly • A monopolized market has a single seller. • The monopolist’s demand curve is the (downward sloping) market demand curve. • So the monopolist can alter the market price by adjusting its output level.

  3. Pure Monopoly $/output unit Higher output y causes alower market price, p(y). p(y) Output Level, y

  4. Why Monopolies? • What causes monopolies? • a legal fiat; e.g. US Postal Service

  5. Why Monopolies? • What causes monopolies? • a legal fiat; e.g. US Postal Service • a patent; e.g. a new drug

  6. Why Monopolies? • What causes monopolies? • a legal fiat; e.g. US Postal Service • a patent; e.g. a new drug • sole ownership of a resource; e.g. a toll highway

  7. Why Monopolies? • What causes monopolies? • a legal fiat; e.g. US Postal Service • a patent; e.g. a new drug • sole ownership of a resource; e.g. a toll highway • formation of a cartel; e.g. OPEC

  8. Why Monopolies? • What causes monopolies? • a legal fiat; e.g. US Postal Service • a patent; e.g. a new drug • sole ownership of a resource; e.g. a toll highway • formation of a cartel; e.g. OPEC • large economies of scale; e.g. local utility companies.

  9. Pure Monopoly • Suppose that the monopolist seeks to maximize its economic profit, • What output level y* maximizes profit?

  10. Profit-Maximization At the profit-maximizing output level y* so, for y = y*,

  11. Profit-Maximization $ R(y) = p(y)y y

  12. Profit-Maximization $ R(y) = p(y)y c(y) y

  13. Profit-Maximization $ R(y) = p(y)y c(y) y P(y)

  14. Profit-Maximization $ R(y) = p(y)y c(y) y* y P(y)

  15. Profit-Maximization $ R(y) = p(y)y c(y) y* y P(y)

  16. Profit-Maximization $ R(y) = p(y)y c(y) y* y P(y)

  17. Profit-Maximization $ R(y) = p(y)y c(y) y* y At the profit-maximizingoutput level the slopes of the revenue and total costcurves are equal; MR(y*) = MC(y*). P(y)

  18. Marginal Revenue Marginal revenue is the rate-of-change of revenue as the output level y increases;

  19. Marginal Revenue Marginal revenue is the rate-of-change of revenue as the output level y increases; dp(y)/dy is the slope of the market inversedemand function so dp(y)/dy < 0. Therefore for y > 0.

  20. Marginal Revenue E.g. if p(y) = a - by then R(y) = p(y)y = ay - by2 and so MR(y) = a - 2by < a - by = p(y) for y > 0.

  21. Marginal Revenue E.g. if p(y) = a - by then R(y) = p(y)y = ay - by2 and so MR(y) = a - 2by < a - by = p(y) for y > 0. p(y) = a - by a y a/b a/2b MR(y) = a - 2by

  22. Marginal Cost Marginal cost is the rate-of-change of totalcost as the output level y increases; E.g. if c(y) = F + ay + by2 then

  23. Marginal Cost $ c(y) = F + ay + by2 F y $/output unit MC(y) = a + 2by a y

  24. Profit-Maximization; An Example At the profit-maximizing output level y*,MR(y*) = MC(y*). So if p(y) = a - by andc(y) = F + ay + by2 then

  25. Profit-Maximization; An Example At the profit-maximizing output level y*,MR(y*) = MC(y*). So if p(y) = a - by and ifc(y) = F + ay + by2 then and the profit-maximizing output level is

  26. Profit-Maximization; An Example At the profit-maximizing output level y*,MR(y*) = MC(y*). So if p(y) = a - by and ifc(y) = F + ay + by2 then and the profit-maximizing output level is causing the market price to be

  27. Profit-Maximization; An Example $/output unit a p(y) = a - by MC(y) = a + 2by a y MR(y) = a - 2by

  28. Profit-Maximization; An Example $/output unit a p(y) = a - by MC(y) = a + 2by a y MR(y) = a - 2by

  29. Profit-Maximization; An Example $/output unit a p(y) = a - by MC(y) = a + 2by a y MR(y) = a - 2by

  30. Monopolistic Pricing & Own-Price Elasticity of Demand • Suppose that market demand becomes less sensitive to changes in price (i.e. the own-price elasticity of demand becomes less negative). Does the monopolist exploit this by causing the market price to rise?

  31. Monopolistic Pricing & Own-Price Elasticity of Demand

  32. Monopolistic Pricing & Own-Price Elasticity of Demand Own-price elasticity of demand is

  33. Monopolistic Pricing & Own-Price Elasticity of Demand Own-price elasticity of demand is so

  34. Monopolistic Pricing & Own-Price Elasticity of Demand Suppose the monopolist’s marginal cost ofproduction is constant, at $k/output unit.For a profit-maximum which is

  35. Monopolistic Pricing & Own-Price Elasticity of Demand E.g. if e = -3 then p(y*) = 3k/2, and if e = -2 then p(y*) = 2k. So as e rises towards -1 the monopolistalters its output level to make the marketprice of its product to rise.

  36. Monopolistic Pricing & Own-Price Elasticity of Demand Notice that, since

  37. Monopolistic Pricing & Own-Price Elasticity of Demand Notice that, since

  38. Monopolistic Pricing & Own-Price Elasticity of Demand Notice that, since That is,

  39. Monopolistic Pricing & Own-Price Elasticity of Demand Notice that, since That is,

  40. Monopolistic Pricing & Own-Price Elasticity of Demand Notice that, since That is, So a profit-maximizing monopolist alwaysselects an output level for which marketdemand is own-price elastic.

  41. Markup Pricing • Markup pricing: Output price is the marginal cost of production plus a “markup.” • How big is a monopolist’s markup and how does it change with the own-price elasticity of demand?

  42. Markup Pricing is the monopolist’s price.

  43. Markup Pricing is the monopolist’s price. The markup is

  44. Markup Pricing is the monopolist’s price. The markup is E.g. if e = -3 then the markup is k/2, and if e = -2 then the markup is k. The markup rises as the own-price elasticity of demand rises towards -1.

  45. A Profits Tax Levied on a Monopoly • A profits tax levied at rate t reduces profit from P(y*) to (1-t)P(y*). • Q: How is after-tax profit, (1-t)P(y*), maximized?

  46. A Profits Tax Levied on a Monopoly • A profits tax levied at rate t reduces profit from P(y*) to (1-t)P(y*). • Q: How is after-tax profit, (1-t)P(y*), maximized? • A: By maximizing before-tax profit, P(y*).

  47. A Profits Tax Levied on a Monopoly • A profits tax levied at rate t reduces profit from P(y*) to (1-t)P(y*). • Q: How is after-tax profit, (1-t)P(y*), maximized? • A: By maximizing before-tax profit, P(y*). • So a profits tax has no effect on the monopolist’s choices of output level, output price, or demands for inputs. • I.e. the profits tax is a neutral tax.

  48. Quantity Tax Levied on a Monopolist • A quantity tax of $t/output unit raises the marginal cost of production by $t. • So the tax reduces the profit-maximizing output level, causes the market price to rise, and input demands to fall. • The quantity tax is distortionary.

  49. Quantity Tax Levied on a Monopolist $/output unit p(y) p(y*) MC(y) y y* MR(y)

  50. Quantity Tax Levied on a Monopolist $/output unit p(y) MC(y) + t p(y*) t MC(y) y y* MR(y)

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