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Monopolistic behavior

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Title: Chapter Twenty-Three Author: LSA Media Services, PC-69 Last modified by: Marek Weretka Created Date: 2/19/1997 3:45:54 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Monopolistic behavior


1
Lecture 20
  • Monopolistic behavior

2
Uniform pricing

p
y
3
Elasticity and markup

4
Elasticity and Markup
  • With MR0, elasticity
  • Elastic part relevant
  • Markup

5
TS, CS, PS and DWL

p
y
6
How Should a Monopoly Price?
  • The same price for each unit to every customer -
    uniform pricing.
  • Price discrimination many different prices for
    the same good
  • Can price-discrimination earn a monopoly higher
    profits?

7
Types of Price Discrimination
  • 1st-degree Prices may differ across output units
    and buyers.
  • 2nd-degree Prices may differ across output unit
    but not buyers. (E.g. bulk-buying discounts.)
  • 3rd-degree Prices may differ across buyers but
    not output units (student discounts)
  • Two part tariff

8
First-degree price discrimination

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y
9
First-degree Price Discrimination
  • First-degree price discrimination
  • gives a monopolist all of the possible
    gains-to-trade,
  • buyers are with zero surplus,
  • efficient amount of output.

10
Third-degree Price Discrimination
  • Market has segments - groups of buyers (seniors,
    students, adults)
  • In each segment the same price
  • Prices different across groups
  • Common in real life

11
Third-degree Price Discrimination
  • Example individual buyers, institutions
  • Secrets of happiness

12
Third-degree Price Discrimination
  • which of the two prices is bigger?

13
Third-degree price discrimination

14
Two-Part Tariffs
  • A two-part tariff is a lump-sum fee, p1, plus a
    price p2 for each unit of product purchased.
  • Thus the cost of buying y units of product
    is p1 p2y.
  • Bars, Disneyland, many others
  • Optimal design

15
Two Part Tariff

p
y
16
Two-Part Tariffs
  • The monopolist maximizes profit by setting
  • by setting per unit price p2 at MC
  • lump-sum fee p1 equal to CS.
  • Optimal two part tariff
  • gives a monopolist all of the possible
    gains-to-trade,
  • buyers are with zero surplus,
  • efficient amount of output.
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