Price and Output determination Under Price Discrimination - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Price and Output determination Under Price Discrimination

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Title: Price and Output determination Under Price Discrimination


1
Price and Output determination Under Price
Discrimination
  • Kamal Singh
  • Lecturer in Economics
  • GCCBA-42 , Chandigarh

2
  • Meaning of Discriminating Monopoly
  • Types Of Discriminating Monopoly
  • Degrees of Discriminating Monopoly
  • Conditions for Discriminating Monopoly
  • Price and Output determination

3
Monopoly Price Discrimination
  • Price DiscriminationThe practice on the part of
    the monopolist to sell the identical goods at the
    same time to different buyers at different prices
    when the price difference is not Justified by
    difference in costs in called price
    discrimination. In the words of Mrs. Joan
    Robinson 
  • "Price discrimination is the act of selling the
    same article produced under single control at a
    different prices to the different buyers".

4
Types of Price Discrimination
  • Price discrimination may be of various types. It
    may either be (i) personal (ii) trade
    discrimination (iii) local discrimination.
  • (1) Price discrimination. It is persona!, when
    separate price is charged from each buyer
    according to the intensity of his desire or
    according to the size of his pocket.
  • (2) Trade discrimination. It may take place when
    a monopolist charges different prices according
    to the uses to which the commodity is put. For
    example, an electricity company may charge low
    rate for electric current used in an industrial
    concern than for the electricity used for the
    domestic purpose.
  • (3) Place discrimination. It occurs when a
    monopolist charges different prices for the same
    commodity at different places. This type of
    discrimination is called, a monopolist sells the
    same commodity at a higher price in one market
    dumping In Economicsand at a lower price in the
    other. Dumping may be undertaken due to several
    reasons, (a) a monopolist may resort to dumping
    in order to dispose off the accumulated stock or
    (b) he may, dump the commodity with a desire to
    capture the foreign market, (c) dumping may also
    be done to drive the competitors out of the
    market, (d) the motive may also be to reap. the
    economies of large scale production, etc.    

5
Degrees of Price Discrimination
  • There are three main degrees of price
    discrimination
  • (1) First degree price discrimination
  • (2) Second degree price discrimination
  • (3) Third degree price discrimination.
  •  

6
  • ) First degree price discrimination. The
    monopolist charges a different price equal to the
    maximum amount for each unit of the commodity
    from each consumer separately. The price of each
    unit is equal to its demand price so that the
    consumer is unable to enjoy any consumer surplus.
  • (2) Second degree price discrimination. Here the
    monopolist divides his market into different
    groups of customers and charges each group the
    highest price which the marginal consumer
    belonging to that group is willing to pay. The
    railway, airlines etc., charge the fares from
    customers in this way.
  • (3) Third degree price discrimination. In the
    third degree price discrimination, the monopolist
    divides the entire market into a few sub-markets
    and charges different prices for the same
    commodity in different sub-markets. The division
    here is among classes of consumers and not among
    individual consumers. For example, movie
    theaters, railways, typically charge lower prices
    to senior citizens, students etc.

7
Condition Of Price Discrimination
  • (1) Segregation by price. There should be no
    possibility, of transferring a unit of commodity
    supplied from the low priced to the high priced
    market. For instance, a rich patient cannot send
    a poor man to the doctor for his medical cheek up
    at a cheaper rate for him.                        
       
  • (2) Segregation by market. Another essential
    characteristic of price discrimination is that
    there should be no possibility of transferring
    one unit of demand from the high priced to the
    low priced market. For instance, a banana market
    is divided on the basis of wealth. The poor are
    supplied bananas at a concessional rate in one
    market. The rich people will not like to become
    poor in order to get the commodity at a cheaper
    rate.   
  • (3) Segregation by demand. Price discrimination
    can be possible if there is difference in the
    elasticity of demand in different markets. If the
    demand for a certain commodity is elastic in a
    particular market, the monopolist will charge
    lower prices. But if the demand is inelastic, the
    monopolist will fix higher prices for his
    product.

8
Price and Output Determination Under
Discrimination Monopoly
  • Conditions
  • (1) Monopoly power. The seller of a good must be
    a monopolist.
  • (2) Segregation of market. The monopolist must be
    able to segregate buyers into separate classes
    with different price elasticities.
  • (3) No reselling. There should be no possibility
    of reselling the good from a tow price market to
    a high price market.

9
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