Monopoly: Monopoly Is Business at The End of Its Journey

Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 25

Monopoly 15

CHAPTER 15

Monopoly

Monopoly is business at the end of


its journey.

— Henry Demarest Lloyd

McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Monopoly 15

Chapter Goals

• Summarize how and why the decisions facing a


monopolist differ from the collective decisions of
competing firms

• Explain why MR = MC maximizes total profit for a


monopolist

• Determine a monopolist’s price, output, and profit


graphically and numerically

15-2
Monopoly 15

Chapter Goals

• Show graphically the welfare loss from monopoly

• Explain why a price-discriminating monopolist will


earn more profit than a normal monopolist

• Explain why there would be no monopoly without


barriers to entry

• Discuss three normative arguments against monopoly

15-3
Monopoly 15

A Monopolistic Market
• Monopoly is a market structure in which one firm makes up
the entire market
• Barriers to entry into the market prevent competition
• Barriers to entry can be:
• Legal
• Sociological
• Natural
• Technological
• There are no close substitutes for the monopolist’s product

15-4
Monopoly 15

The Key Difference


Between a Monopolist and a Perfect Competitor

• A monopolistic firm’s marginal revenue is not its price


• Marginal revenue is always below its price
• Marginal revenue changes as output changes
and is not equal to the price

• A monopolistic firm’s output decision can affect price

• There is no competition in monopolistic markets so


monopolists see to it that monopolists, not consumers,
benefit

15-5
Monopoly 15

Profit Maximizing Level of Output

• The goal of the monopolistic firm is to maximize profits,


the difference between total revenue and total cost
• The monopoly maximizes profit when marginal revenue
equals marginal cost
• Marginal revenue (MR) is the change in total revenue
associated with a change in quantity
• Marginal cost (MC) is the change in total cost associated
with a change in quantity

15-6
Monopoly 15

Profit Maximizing Level of Output

• The profit-maximizing condition of a monopolistic firm is:


MR = MC

• For a monopolistic firm, MR < P


• A monopolistic firm maximizes total profit, not profit per unit
If MR > MC,
• The monopoly can increase profit by increasing output
If MR < MC,
• The monopoly can increase profit by decreasing its output

15-7
Monopoly 15

Monopolistic Profit Maximization Table The profit-


maximizing
condition is:
Q P ($) TR ($) MR ($) TC ($) MC ($) ATC ($) Profit ($) MR = MR
0 36 0 47 --- -47
33 1
1 33 33 48 48.00 -15 If MC < MR,
27 2
2 30 60 50 25.00 10 increase
21 4 production
3 27 81 54 18.00 27
15 8
4 24 96 62 15.50 34 Profit maximizing
9 16 quantity is where
5 21 105 78 15.60 27
3 54 MC = MR
6 18 108 102 17.00 6
-3 40
7 15 105 142 20.29 -37 If MC > MR,
-9 56 decrease
8 12 96 198 24.75 -102
-15 80 production
9 9 81 278 30.89 -197

15-8
Monopoly 15

Monopolistic Profit Maximization Graph


Marginal revenue is not constant
P as Q increases because:
• revenue increases as the
MC
monopolist sells more
• revenue decreases because the
D at Qprofit max monopolist must lower the price
to sell more
P= Find output where
$24
MC = MR, this is the profit
maximizing Q
MC = MR
D Find how much consumers
MR will pay where the profit
Q max Q intersects demand,
4 = Qprofit max
this is the monopolist price

15-9
Monopoly 15

Monopoly Compared to Perfect Competition Graph

• In a monopoly, P>MR,
P • In perfect competition, P=MR=D
MC • MR=MC is the profit max rule for
both

First find the monopoly


Q and P
PM
PPC
Then find the perfectly
DPC= MRPC competitive Q and P
DM
Outcome: Monopoly output
MRM is lower and price is higher
Q
QM QPC than perfect competition

15-10
Monopoly 15
Find output where Determining Profits Graphically:
MC = MR, this is the profit
A Firm with Profit
maximizing Q
P
Find how much consumers MC
will pay where the profit
max Q intersects demand,
D at Qprofit max
this is the monopolist price ATC

P
Find profit per unit where Profits
the profit max Q ATC ATC at Qprofit max
intersects ATC
MC = MR
D
Since P>ATC at the MR
profit maximizing quantity, Q
Qprofit max
this firm is earning profits

15-11
Monopoly 15
Determining Profits Graphically: Find output where
A Firm with Zero Profit or Losses MC = MR, this is the profit
maximizing Q
P
MC Find how much consumers
will pay where the profit
ATC
D at Qprofit max max Q intersects demand,
this is the monopolist price

P
Find profit per unit where
=ATC ATC at Qprofit max
the profit max Q
intersects ATC
MC = MR
D Since P=ATC at the
MR profit maximizing quantity,
Q this firm is earning
Qprofit max
zero profit or loss

15-12
Monopoly 15

Find output where


Determining Profits Graphically:
MC = MR, this is the profit A Firm with Losses
maximizing Q
P
Find how much consumers ATC at Qprofit max MC
will pay where the profit ATC
max Q intersects demand,
this is the monopolist price
ATC
Losses D at Qprofit max
P
Find profit per unit where
the profit max Q
intersects ATC
MC = MR
D
Since P<ATC at the MR
profit maximizing quantity, Q
Qprofit max
this firm is earning losses

15-13
Monopoly 15

The Welfare Loss from a Monopoly

P • The welfare loss from a


MC monopoly is represented by
the triangles B and D
• The rectangle C is a transfer
of surplus from the consumer
PM C to the monopolist
PPC D
B
• The area A represents the
opportunity cost of diverted
D resources, which is not a loss
A MR to society
QM QPC Q

15-14
Monopoly 15

The Price-Discriminating Monopolist

• When a monopolist price discriminates, it charges


different prices to different individuals or groups of
individuals
• Consumers with less elastic demands are charged
higher prices.
• Consumers with more elastic demands are
charged lower prices

• Price discrimination increases output and profits

15-15
Monopoly 15

The Price-Discriminating Monopolist

• Examples of price discrimination


• Movie discounts to senior citizens and children
• Airline discounts for Saturday-night stay overs
• Cars are seldom sold at list price
• Tracking consumer information and pricing
accordingly
• These markets are highly susceptible to price
discrimination because the market demand is made
up of distinguishable individuals who have different
demand elasticites

15-16
Monopoly 15

Barriers to Entry
• Natural Ability
• A firm is better at producing the good than anyone
else
• Economies of Scale
• Natural monopoly is when a single firm can
produce at a lower cost than can two or more firms
• Government-Created Monopolies
• Patents, licenses, and franchises
• If there were no barriers to entry, profit-maximizing firms
would always compete away monopoly profits

15-17
Monopoly 15

A Natural Monopoly Graph


Average • One firm producing Q1 has average cost C1
Cost
• If two firms share the market, each produces
Q0.5 and has average cost C0.5

• If three firms share the market, each


produces Q0.33 has average cost C0.33
C0.33

C0.5

C1
ATC
Q0.33 Q0.5 Q1 Q

15-18
Monopoly 15

A Natural Monopoly Graph, Profit and Regulation


• A natural monopolist produces QM and
Average
Cost charges PM, therefore earning a profit
• If there is government regulation and a
competitive solution where P = MC is
required, the monopolist produces QC
PM and charges PC, therefore earning a loss
Profits
CM

CC
Losses ATC
PC
MR MC
D
Q
QM QC

15-19
Monopoly 15

Normative Views of Monopoly

• Monopolies are unjust because they restrict freedom to


enter business

• Monopolies transfer income from “deserving” consumers


to “undeserving” monopolists

• Monopolies cause potential monopolists to waste


resources trying to get monopolies
• Rent-seeking activities

15-20
Monopoly 15

Government Policy and Monopoly: AIDS Drugs

• A few companies have patents for AIDS drugs that enable


them to charge high prices because demand is inelastic

Policy Options
• Government regulation where price = marginal cost
benefits society, but discourages research
• Government purchase of the patents and allowing
anyone to produce the drugs so their price = marginal
cost. This is expensive for taxpayers.

15-21
Monopoly 15

Chapter Summary
• Monopoly is a market structure, protected by barriers to
entry, in which a single firm produces a product for which
there are no close substitutes
• A monopolist maximizes profit or minimizes losses where
MR=MC
• To determine a monopolist’s profit or loss:
• Find output where MR=MC
• Determine price and ATC at that output
• Profit or loss = (P – ATC) * Q

15-22
Monopoly 15

Chapter Summary

• Monopoly output is lower and price is higher than in


competitive markets
• Because monopolies reduce output and charge P > MC,
monopolies create a welfare loss for society
• A price-discriminating monopolist earns more profit than
a normal monopolist by charging a higher price to those
with less elastic demand and a lower price to those with
more elastic demand

15-23
Monopoly 15

Chapter Summary
• Natural monopolies exist in industries with strong
economies of scale, so it is more efficient for one firm to
produce the entire output
• In a natural monopoly the competitive outcome where
P=MC results in losses
• Normative arguments against monopoly are:
• Monopolies are inconsistent with freedom
• Distributional effects of monopoly are unfair
• Monopolies encourage people to waste time and
money trying to get monopolies

15-24
Monopoly 15

Preview of Chapter 16:


Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly

• List the four distinguishing characteristics of monopolistic competition

• Demonstrate graphically the equilibrium of a monopolistic competitor

• State the central element of oligopoly

• Explain why decisions in the cartel model depend on market share and
decisions in the contestable market model depend on barriers to entry

• Describe two empirical methods of determining market structure

15-25

You might also like