Discriminating Monopoly
Discriminating Monopoly
Discriminating Monopoly
Meaning of Discriminating Monopoly Types Of Discriminating Monopoly Degrees of Discriminating Monopoly Conditions for Discriminating Monopoly Price and Output determination
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.
) 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 submarkets 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.