1 / 32

Monopolies & Regulation

Chapter 24 & 26. Monopolies & Regulation. Monopoly. A firm that produces the entire market supply of a particular good or service. Chapter 24 & 26. 2. Monopoly Characteristics. Single firm or seller No close substitutes High barriers to entry Firm has all market power

taline
Download Presentation

Monopolies & Regulation

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. Chapter 24 & 26 Monopolies & Regulation

  2. Monopoly • A firm that produces the entire market supply of a particular good or service. Chapter 24 & 26 2

  3. Monopoly Characteristics • Single firm or seller • No close substitutes • High barriers to entry • Firm has allmarket power • Firm is a Price Setter • Advertising for luxury goods only • Ex: Local Electric Company Chapter 24 & 26 3

  4. Market Power • The ability to alter the market price and characteristics of a good or service. Chapter 24 & 26 4

  5. Monopoly Demand Curve • The demand curve facing the monopoly firm is the market demand curve for the product. • Firms with market power confront downward-sloping demand curves. Chapter 24 & 26 5

  6. Demand & Price • Since the company is the industry the company can choose where on the demand curve (and at what price) they want to work. Chapter 24 & 26 6

  7. The Market & Company Chapter 24 & 26 7

  8. Price and Marginal Revenue • A monopoly faces a different profit maximizing situation than competitive firms. • Profit-maximization rule is the same: • Produce at that rate of output where MR = MC. Chapter 24 & 26 8

  9. Profit Maximization • The point where MC = MR determines the profit maximizing quantity at a given price. • The advantage for a monopoly is that it can alter the price it charges. • The demand curve determines the quantity for each price. Chapter 24 & 26 9

  10. Monopoly Profits • Sometimes increasing Price & decreasing Quantity will increase Total Revenue • Sometimes decreasing Price & increasing Quantity will increase Total Revenue • It depends on the Elasticity of the product’s demand • If demand is elastic, lower price will lead to higher TR Chapter 24 & 26 10

  11. Barriers to Entry • Unless there are barriers to entry, high monopoly profits tend to attract profit-hungry entrepreneurs into the market. • These profits will be maintained as long as barriers to entry prevent any competitors from entering the market. Chapter 24 & 26 11

  12. Political Power • A firm with considerable market power likely to have significant political power as well. Chapter 24 & 26 12

  13. The Limits to Power • Monopolists only have absolute control of the quantity of output supplied to the market. • Monopolists must still contend with the market demand curve. Chapter 24 & 26 13

  14. Price Discrimination • The sale of an identical good at different prices to different consumers by a single seller. • This has nothing to do with costs to produce Chapter 24 & 26 14

  15. Price Discrimination Examples • Senior Citizens discounts • Student discounts • In-state tuition • Matinee prices • Coupons • Military discount Chapter 24 & 26 15

  16. Entry Barriers • Patents • Monopoly franchises or licenses • Control/ownership of key production resources • Land, labor, capital, entrepreneurial ability • Control of distribution outlets • Well-established brand loyalty • Government regulation • Lawsuits • Acquisition of competition • Economies of scale Chapter 24 & 26 16

  17. Ways to Enter a Monopoly Market • Acquisition • buy out the current company • Overcome all the entry barriers • Make a different product & “sneak in” • Money, determination (time) or ingenuity Chapter 24 & 26 17

  18. Monopolies & The Economy • Generally, Monopolies lead to: • Higher prices • Less variety • Slower innovation • Lower employment Chapter 24 & 26 18

  19. Monopolies & Government • Based on the bad that monopolies bring to the economy, the U.S. government is against them. Chapter 24 & 26 19

  20. If A Monopoly Is Not Beneficial • The government will either: • Keep a monopoly from forming • Break up any existing monopolies • If a monopoly is beneficial to society the government may allow it to exist. If so, the government will regulate it. Chapter 24 & 26 20

  21. Why Allow a Monopoly? • Society’s good • lower price from a natural monopoly • Bring products & services to people who would not get them. • Better resource allocation • Economies of Scale • Better for the environment • More Research and Development • Product standardization Chapter 24 & 26 21

  22. Natural Monopolies • An industry in which one firm can produce at a lower ATC than 2 firms can. • Economies of scale act as a “natural” barrier to entry. • Examples: • local telephone services • local cable services Chapter 24 & 26 22

  23. Regulating Monopolies • The government can regulate: • The prices the monopoly can charge the customer • The output of the monopoly • The quality of the products Chapter 24 & 26 23

  24. Regulating Monopolies • The most common regulation of monopolies is regulating the price the monopoly can charge. • Two methods: • Socially Optimal Price • Fair-Return Price Chapter 24 & 26 24

  25. Price Ceiling • The government sets the maximum price the monopoly can charge the customer. • The government then subsidizes the monopoly with direct payments for expenses & profits. • In essence, the company is a de-facto department of the government Chapter 24 & 26 25

  26. Socially Optimal Pricing • Price = MC • The government forces a price cap at MC, so there is no “economic profit”. • The price is just as it “would be” if industry was Pure Competition • The government then subsidizes the monopoly with direct payments for expenses & profits. • In essence, the company is a de-facto department of the government Chapter 24 & 26 26

  27. Fair-Return Pricing • Price = ATC • Extra capacity is needed for peak usage times. To build this excess capacity price needs to be higher than MC. • ATC is calculated with excess capacity to ensure enough for the high-demand times. Chapter 24 & 26 27

  28. Normal Profit and Monopolies • In both cases, there is a “normal profit” allowed, as a percentage above cost. Chapter 24 & 26 28

  29. Monopoly Behavior with Regulation • The problem with both regulation plans is there is no incentive to reduce costs. • Where profit is a percent of cost, the higher the costs are, the higher the profit will be. • Easy for companies to upgrade equipment • Easy to abuse Chapter 24 & 26 29

  30. Costs of Regulation • Administrative costs • To create the regulations • Compliance costs • To enforce the regulations • Efficiency costs • Bad regulations & corrective measures Chapter 24 & 26 30

  31. Antitrust Laws • Sherman Act (1890) • prohibits “conspiracies in restraint of trade”. • Clayton Act (1914) • prohibited price discrimination, exclusive dealing agreements, certain types of mergers, and interlocking boards of directors among competing firms. • The Federal Trade Commission Act (1914) • created the FTC to study industry structures and behavior so as to identify anti-competitive practices. Chapter 24 & 26 31

  32. Objections To Anti-Trust • Punishing people for being successful • Lack of competition may not be the company’s fault • Large companies are needed to compete globally Chapter 24 & 26 32

More Related