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Econ 100 Lecture 5-2

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Econ 100 Lecture 5-2 Market Failure: Monopoly 10-26-10 Departures from Perfect Competition Market structural problems Monopoly: single supplier/seller Monopsony ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Econ 100 Lecture 5-2


1
Econ 100Lecture 5-2
  • Market Failure
  • Monopoly
  • 10-26-10

2
Departures from Perfect Competition
  • Market structural problems
  • Monopoly single supplier/seller
  • Monopsony single buyer
  • Oligopoly few sellers
  • Externalities
  • Public goods positive externalities (free
    riders)
  • Negative Externalities

3
Departures from the Competitive Market Assumptions
  • No buyer or seller has market power
  • Information costs are minimal
  • Product quality is known and products are
    homogenous
  • No legal/cost barriers to entry
  • Close substitutes
  • No externalities positive or negative

4
Monopoly
  • Features
  • Single seller, i.e., a price-searcher
  • May be the result of
  • Legal barriers to entry, e.g., med school
  • Economies of scale, i.e., efficient for only 1
    firm to operate (e.g., public utilities)
  • Information costs are high
  • determining product quality is costly

5
Wikipedias Definition
  • A monopoly (from Greek mono(ยต???), alone or
    single pol? (p???), to sell)
  • Only one provider of a product or service in a
    particular market.
  • Lack of economic competition for the good or
    service that they provide and a lack of viable
    substitute goods.
  • Distinguished from monopsony, in which there is
    only one buyer of a product or service
  • Distinguished from a cartel (a form of
    oligopoly), in which several providers act
    together to coordinate services, prices or sale
    of goods.

6
Whats Different?
  • The profit maximizing rule for both a monopolist
    and a competitive firm is the same
  • Choose output level such that MRev MCost
  • Difference is
  • For a competitive firm price MRev
  • As it takes price as given
  • For a monopolist
  • Each successive unit supplied/sold lowers the
    price (avg rev) and marginal revenue (MRev)

7
An Example
8
In Words
  • For a price-searcher
  • Amount supplied has a negative effect on the
    price received, i.e., average (or per-unit) price
    falls with each additional unit sold
  • Therefore, if Average Revenue (Demand Curve) is
    falling, then Marginal Revenue is falling and is
    falling faster than AR
  • MR is below AR

9
Whats the Impact on Market Efficiency?
  • DWLoss as higher P lower Q
  • Transfer from CS to PS

10
Monopolies and Market Efficiency
  • A monopoly will sell
  • a lower quantity of goods
  • at a higher price than firms would in a purely
    competitive market.
  • Monopoly will secure monopoly profits by
    appropriating some or all of the consumer
    surplus

11
A Couple of Questions
  • Is the monopolist earning an economic profit?

12
A Couple of Questions
  • What is the demand elasticity at the Monopolists
    Profit-Max?

13
Demand Elasticity
  • As long as the price elasticity of demand for
    most customers is less than one in absolute
    value,
  • firm increases its prices it then receives more
    money for fewer goods.
  • With a price increase, price elasticity tends to
    rise, and
  • in the optimum case above it will be greater than
    one for most customers.

14
A Couple of Questions
  • Since the Monopolist is earning an economic
    profit, why arent other firms entering the
    market and dissipating the economic rent?

15
Possible Answers
  • Barriers to entry
  • Legal barriers entry is prohibited by
    legislation
  • Medical Profession
  • Accreditation contrast to law schools/entry
  • Pharmaceuticals
  • Patents
  • Airline hubs
  • Regulated number of gates

16
Possible Answers
  • Unique Costs
  • High fixed costs
  • Generally industrial e.g., automotive (big 3
    before globalization), airlines
  • Economies-of-scale are so large
  • natural monopolies public utilities
    (telecomm, electricity, energy)

17
Possible Answers
  • No/few close substitutes
  • unique resources
  • diamonds, mining industries

18
Examples of Monopolies
  • Examples of alleged and legal monopolies
  • The salt commission, a legal monopoly in China
    formed in 758.
  • British East India Company created as a legal
    trading monopoly in 1600.
  • Dutch East India Company created as a legal
    trading monopoly in 1602.
  • U.S. Steel anti-trust prosecution failed in
    1911.
  • Standard Oil broken up in 1911.
  • National Football League survived anti-trust
    lawsuit in the 1960s, convicted of being an
    illegal monopoly in the 1980s.
  • Major League Baseball survived U.S. anti-trust
    litigation in 1922, though its special status is
    still in dispute as of 2007.
  • United Aircraft and Transport Corporation
    aircraft manufacturer holding company forced to
    divest itself of airlines in 1934.
  • American Telephone Telegraph
    telecommunications giant broken up in 1982.
  • Microsoft settled anti-trust litigation in the
    U.S. in 2001 fined by the European Commission in
    2004, which was upheld for the most part by the
    Court of First Instance of the European
    Communities in 2007.
  • De Beers settled charges of price fixing in the
    diamond trade in the 2000s.
  • Apple Inc., Accused of forming a Vertical
    Monopoly, with iPod, iTunes, iTunes Music Store,
    and the FairPlay DRM System.

19
The Downside to Monopolies
  • Negative aspects
  • tend to become less efficient and innovative over
    time,
  • "complacent giants", do not have to be efficient
    or innovative to compete in the marketplace.
  • On the Other Hand
  • Loss of efficiency can raise a potential
    competitor's value enough to overcome market
    entry barriers, or provide incentive for research
    and investment into new alternatives.
  • The theory of contestable markets argues that in
    some circumstances (private) monopolies are
    forced to behave as if there were competition
    because of the risk of losing their monopoly to
    new entrants.
  • This is likely to happen where a market's
    barriers to entry are low.
  • Availability in the longer term of substitutes in
    other markets. For example, a canal monopoly,
    while worth a great deal in the late eighteenth
    century United Kingdom, was worth much less in
    the late nineteenth century because of the
    introduction of railways as a substitute.

20
Upside to Monopolies?
  • Positive aspects
  • Some argue that it can be good to allow a firm to
    attempt to monopolize a market, since practices
    such as dumping can benefit consumers in the
    short term and once the firm grows too big, it
    can be dealt with via regulation. When monopolies
    are not broken through the open market, often a
    government will step in, either to regulate the
    monopoly, turn it into a publicly owned monopoly,
    or forcibly break it up (see Antitrust law).
    Public utilities, often being natural monopolies
    and less susceptible to efficient breakup, are
    often strongly regulated or publicly owned. ATT
    and Standard Oil are debatable examples of the
    breakup of a private monopoly. When ATT was
    broken up into the "Baby Bell" components, MCI,
    Sprint, and other companies were able to compete
    effectively in the long distance phone market and
    began to take phone traffic from the less
    efficient ATT.
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