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DPQ

DPQ. DPQ?. Digitally Powered Quad Deliberately Pruned Quince Delicious Pepperoni Quiche Deadly Poisonous Quiver Dave Purposely Quit Dreaded Pop Quiz. DPQ. Digitally Powered Quad Deliberately Pruned Quince Delicious Pepperoni Quiche Deadly Poisonous Quiver Dave Purposely Quit

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DPQ

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  1. DPQ

  2. DPQ? • Digitally Powered Quad • Deliberately Pruned Quince • Delicious Pepperoni Quiche • Deadly Poisonous Quiver • Dave Purposely Quit • Dreaded Pop Quiz

  3. DPQ • Digitally Powered Quad • Deliberately Pruned Quince • Delicious Pepperoni Quiche • Deadly Poisonous Quiver • Dave Purposely Quit • Dreaded Pop Quiz

  4. dreaded pop quiz

  5. Big Business and Government

  6. What is a monopoly?

  7. What is a monopoly? • Monopoly: one seller. Examples, old regional phone companies, Alcoa in old days, railroads in old days. Could even by a tiny store if it’s the only one around... i.e., daboyz ‘nade stand (for a fleeting moment)

  8. Monopolies • Monopoly causes harm not just by charging prices higher than they would be with competition, it also affects the total wealth of an economy

  9. Monopolies • Monopoly causes harm not just by charging prices higher than they would be with competition, it also affects the total wealth of an economy • Monopolies cause consumers to buy less at the higher price and cause inefficient use of scare resources that have alternative uses

  10. Monopolies • Monopoly causes harm not just by charging prices higher than they would be with competition, it also affects the total wealth of an economy • Monopolies cause consumers to buy less at the higher price and cause inefficient use of scare resources that have alternative uses • Luckily, monopolies almost impossible to maintain without government protection

  11. More on Monopolies • But they do exist: just take a taxi in New York… or try to, especially in the theater district on a rainy night at 11 p.m.

  12. More on Monopolies • But they do exist: just take a taxi in New York… or try to, especially in the theater district on a rainy night at 11 p.m. • If cabs and drivers were freely allowed to compete, fares would come down and there would be more prosperity

  13. What’s an oligopoly?

  14. What’s an oligopoly? • Oligopoly: a small number of sellers who may cooperate with one another in setting prices; can produce results similar to a monopoly

  15. What’s an oligopoly? • Oligopoly: a small number of sellers who may cooperate with one another in setting prices; can produce results similar to a monopoly • Examples: Four companies control 89% of U.S. wireless market (AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile)

  16. What’s an oligopoly? • Oligopoly: a small number of sellers who may cooperate with one another in setting prices; can produce results similar to a monopoly • Examples: Four companies control 89% of U.S. wireless market (AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile) • Usually defined by having xx% of market share

  17. What’s a cartel?

  18. What’s a cartel? • Cartel: an international syndicate, combine or trust formed specifically to regulate prices and output in some field of business

  19. What’s a cartel? • Cartel: an international syndicate, combine or trust formed specifically to regulate prices and output in some field of business • OPEC (Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries) is the classic cartel

  20. What’s a cartel? • Cartel: an international syndicate, combine or trust formed specifically to regulate prices and output in some field of business • OPEC (Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries) is the classic cartel • But even OPEC cannot control oil prices... consumers respond to higher prices, OPEC members cheat, alternate fuels, technology such as Prius

  21. Anti-Trust Laws

  22. Anti-Trust Laws • Some huge biz organizations were known as trusts, hence “anti-trust” laws passed by governments

  23. Anti-Trust Laws • Some huge biz organizations were known as trusts, hence “anti-trust” laws passed by governments • Intent was to prevent monopolies and cartels from artificially raising prices

  24. Anti-Trust Laws • Some huge biz organizations were known as trusts, hence “anti-trust” laws passed by governments • Intent was to prevent monopolies and cartels from artificially raising prices • Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890:

  25. Sherman Anti-Trust • Sherman: Not specifically intended to prevent the dominance of an industry by a specific company. Any company that "got the whole business because nobody could do it as well as he could" would not be in violation of the act.

  26. Sherman Anti-Trust • The law attempts to prevent the artificial raising of prices by restriction of trade or supply. In other words, innocent monopoly is perfectly legal, but acts by a monopolist to artificially preserve his status, or nefarious dealings to create a monopoly, are not.

  27. Anti-Trust Laws, Take 2 • However, we always look at ________ not intent

  28. Anti-Trust Laws, Take 2 • However, we always look at ________ not intent • And as you read……….. Yep, business soon learned to lobby government to use anti-trust laws to restrict competition

  29. Anti-Trust Laws, Take 2 • However, we always look at ________ not intent • And as you read……….. Yep, business soon learned to lobby government to use anti-trust laws to restrict competition • Some of the most famous anti-trust cases involved business that charged lower prices

  30. More Anti-Trust Stuff • Morton Salt, Borden milk, Microsoft giving away Internet Explorer

  31. More Anti-Trust Stuff • Morton Salt, Borden milk, Microsoft giving away Internet Explorer • Problem is the issue of how much of the market a company “controls”

  32. More Anti-Trust Stuff • Morton Salt, Borden milk, Microsoft giving away Internet Explorer • Problem is the issue of how much of the market a company “controls” • In actuality, in a free market, competition will dictate your market share, if you’re really efficient it can get quite large... iPod, Google

  33. Anti-Trust redux • Consumers win when companies like Wal*Mart lower prices, but benefits gets lost in the confusion

  34. Anti-Trust redux • Consumers win when companies like Wal*Mart lower prices, but benefits gets lost in the confusion • Also forgotten is that alternate products can substitute when prices get too high… i.e., limits on newspaper ownership in one city are absurd with internet, news radio, etc.

  35. Anti-Trust redux • Consumers win when companies like Wal*Mart lower prices, but benefits gets lost in the confusion • Also forgotten is that alternate products can substitute when prices get too high… i.e., limits on newspaper ownership in one city are absurd with internet, news radio, etc. • Key to monopoly is not market share, but the ability to keep others out

  36. Regulatory Commissions

  37. Regulatory Commissions • ICC, Public Service Commissions, SEC, FDA, EPA, FEC, FCC, etc. etc. etc. etc.

  38. Regulatory Commissions • ICC, Public Service Commissions, SEC, FDA, EPA, FEC, FCC, etc. etc. etc. etc. • Functions are nearly impossible to do properly

  39. Regulatory Commissions • ICC, Public Service Commissions, SEC, FDA, EPA, FEC, FCC, etc. etc. etc. etc. • Functions are nearly impossible to do properly • Most onerous with power companies

  40. Regulatory Commissions • Only the actual functioning of the market could reveal what the price should be, with less efficient firms being eliminated by bankruptcy

  41. Regulatory Commissions • Only the actual functioning of the market could reveal what the price should be, with less efficient firms being eliminated by bankruptcy • Cost of electricity can vary tremendously… time, fuel sources

  42. Regulations under Obama • Tremendous increase in number of agencies and regulations under Obama and Democrat Congress

  43. Regulations under Obama • Tremendous increase in number of agencies and regulations under Obama and Democrat Congress • New ‘super’ consumer agency is regulating ATM fees, checking costs, profit margins... turning banks into regulated utilities

  44. Regulations under Obama • Tremendous increase in number of agencies and regulations under Obama and Democrat Congress • New ‘super’ consumer agency is regulating ATM fees, checking costs, profit margins... turning banks into regulated utilities • EPA is proposing regs that will cost trillions and ship millions of jobs overseas

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