Monopoly
Monopoly
Monopoly
Monopoly:
Is a firm that is the sole seller of a product without close substitutes. (Tv licensing)
Monopolist:
The single firm in the monopoly market.
Price Market:
A firm is able to influence the market price of its product.
Barriers to entry:
A market characteristic that prevents new firms to enter the market.
Oligopoly:
A market where only few large firms dominate.
Oligopolists:
Individual firms in an to oligopoly market.
Profit-Maximization
A competitive firm
Takes P as given
Has a supply curve that shows how its Q depends on R
A monopoly firm
Price Discrimination
Price discrimination: selling the same good at different prices to difficult buyers.
Movie tickets
Discounts for seniors, students, and people who can attend during weekday afternoons.
They are all more likely to have lower WTP than people who pay full price on Friday night.
Airline prices
Discounts for Saturday-night stay over help distinguish business travelers, who usually have
higher WTP. From more price-sensitive leisure travelers.
Discount coupons
People who have time to clip and organize coupons are more likely to have lower income
and lower WTP than others.
Low income families have lower WTP for their children's college education. Schools price-
discriminate by offering need-based aid to low income families.
Quantity discounts
A buyer's WTP often declines with additional units, so firms charge less per unit for large
quantities than small ones.
Example: a movie theater charges $4 for a small popcorn and $5 for a large one that's twice
as big.
Regulation
Doing nothing
The foregoing policies all have drawbacks, so the best policy may be no policy.
Monopoly's summary
A monopoly firm is the sole seller in its market. Monopolies arise due to barriers to
entry, including: government –granted monopolies, the control of a key resource, or
economies of scale over the entire range of output.
A monopoly firm faces a downward-sloping demand curve for its product. As a
result, it must reduce price to sell a larger quantity, which causes marginal revenue
to fall below price.
Monopoly firms maximize profits by producing the quantity where marginal revenue
equals marginal cost. But since marginal revenue is less than price, the monopoly
price will be greater than marginal cost, leading to a deadweight loss.
Monopoly firms (and others with market power) try to raise their profits by charging
higher prices to consumers with higher willingness to pay WTP. This practice is called
price discrimination.
Policymakers may respond by regulation monopolies, using antitrust laws to
promote competition, or by taking over the monopoly and running it. Due to
problems with each of these options, the best option may be to take no action