Chapter 11-1 - 1
Chapter 11-1 - 1
Chapter 11-1 - 1
3
CHAPTER 11
Monopoly and Imperfect
Competition
Learning Outcomes
Differentiate between different market forms (Table 10-1 on page 164)
Explain (monopoly)
SR equilibrium
LR equilibrium
Price discrimination
Natural monopolies
Disadvantages and advantages of bigness
Compare the outcome under perfect competition with the outcome under
monopoly
Briefly explain the purpose of competition policy
Calculate & graph
TR, MR, AR
Equilibrium
Natural monopolies
Review: Perfect Competition
Perfect competition
Profit max at …
Shut down point…
DEMAND curve is …
Price determined by …
P = AR = MR
Supply Curve
SR
Economic profit, Normal profit, Economic loss
LR
Impact of entry and exit
Normal profit
The main goal of a firm does not change
Profit max @ MR = MC
11.1) Monopoly
Occurs when there is one seller of a good or service that has no close
substitutes
Dominant seller in the market and are able to exert some control over the
market as a result
DEMAND (Individual firm) = MARKET DEMAND (Industry)
Negative sloping demand curve
Price maker/setter BUT
quantity sold still depends on principles of demand
demand for highly price inelastic products creates scope for consumer
exploitation
NB Further characteristics in Table 10-1 (pg. 164)
A fundamental cause of monopoly is barriers to entry (NB see BOX 11-1)
Barriers to entry into monopoly
• Exist where there is something that prevents a firm from entering an
industry.
• These barriers give rise to monopoly or near-monopoly and may protect
existing monopolists from competition.
• Barriers to entry have the following sources:
o Natural monopoly (economies of scale)
o Limited size of the market
o Exclusive ownership of raw materials (e.g. De Beers Consolidated mines)
o Patents
o Licensing (e.g. MTN & Vodacom)
o Sole rights
o Import restrictions
o Firms can create their own barriers (e.g. Predatory pricing, excess capacity)
o Further reading in textbook page 181
Pure monopolies are a relatively rare occurrence - Why?. Look at the definition of
a monopoly. Although most sellers would be the single seller in an industry, it would
sell products that have close substitutes, making them near monopolies and not pure
monopolies
Examples of firms which may approximate conditions of a monopoly in South Africa
would be:
11.1.1) Profit maximisation of a Monopolist
Demand curve
Table 11-1 & Fig. 11-1 pg 200
Total Revenue (TR)
P x Q … (AR x Q)
NB !!!
o P ≠ MR, AR ≠ MR
Price NOT fixed
For monopoly
o P > MR = MC
Table 11-1 & Fig. 11-1
Fig. 11-1(b): TR
When MR is positive, TR increases;
When MR is zero, TR remains
unchanged;
When MR is negative, TR falls
Box 13-2: Marginal Revenue & Elasticity
100
MR is positive when
50 ep>1, TR
D
MR
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 MR = 0 when ep =1,
R750 Total-Revenue Curve
TR max
Total Revenue
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18
11.1.2) A Monopolist Short-run Equilibrium
Profit is max @ MR=MC
Profit maximising output (Q1) will be sold at
the price which consumers are willing to pay
as indicated by the D-curve shown by M1
(P1)
Q1 is being supplied at a cost of C1 shown by
K1
Profit is still ...
MR=MC
AR – AC
Total economic profit is indicated by shaded
area
Increasing output beyond Q1
MC > MR
At lower levels of output than Q1
MR > MC
Why a Monopoly does not have a Supply Curve??
First imagine what a supply curve is?.....A supply curve tells us the quantity
that firms choose to supply at any given price
With a monopolist, there is no function of price that determines what
quantity a firm will offer given a price (i.e. there is no one-to-one
relationship between P & Q)
Instead, the quantity that a monopolist offers is determined by the entire
demand curve it faces
Also, there is an instance where the Law of Supply (Remember what it
is?....chapter 4) does not function and is violated (in a case of monopoly, the
↑P=↑Qs and vice versa might not always happen)
Therefore, the concept of supply curve is relevant only when the firm has
no control over the price of the product and therefore takes it as given
(remember a monopoly sets the price…)
11.1.3) A Monopolist’s Long-run Equilibrium
Production efficiency:
Where AC is @ minimum
(BUT not the case)
Allocative efficiency : P = MC
Results in loss AC > AR as
indicated by P3 and Q3
Production efficiency:
Where AC is @ minimum
(BUT not the case as no
quantity is produced)
Allocative efficiency : P = MC
Results in loss AC>AR as
indicated by P3 and Q3
Natural monopoly pricing?
Production efficiency:
Where AC is @ minimum
(BUT not the case)
Allocative efficiency : P = MC
Results in loss AC > AR as
indicated by P3 and Q3
WHAT NOW??
WHAT NOW??
Each firm has a certain degree of monopoly power since it is the only
producer of a particular brand (e.g. Woolworths & Woolies products,
KFC is the only firm selling that kind of fried chicken)
AR = DEMAND
(Fig. 11-7 page 198)
MC = SUPPLY
Monopolist
Pm, Qm @ MR = MC
Perfect competitor
Pc, Qc @ S = D
Lower output
Higher price
Little or no incentive for innovation and technological improvement
Managerial inefficiency
Questionable quality of products or service
Gives rise to unfair or socially unacceptable income and wealth distribution
Engage in rent-seeking behaviour
Have significant economic power and are politically powerful
Textbook page 199-200
6) POLICY: Monopoly & Imperfect Competition
Taxation
Government ownership
Regulation
Laws, rules and regulations
Competition policy
Aims (very important)
Monopoly policy
Merger policy
Restrictive practice policy
Competition commission
Textbook page 202
Competition Policy In South Africa
https
://businesstech.co.za/news/banking/157915/sa-banks-face-massive-fines-over-pri
ce-fixing-and-collusion
/
South African Broadcasting (2011-2019)
https://www.fin24.com/Companies/sabc-primedia-ster-
kinekor-fined-millions-for-price-fixing-20190227
Competition Commission South Africa
Summary: Chapter 11
Differentiate between different market forms (Table 10-1 on page 164)
Explain (monopoly)
SR equilibrium
LR equilibrium
Price discrimination
Natural monopolies
Disadvantages and advantages of bigness
Compare the outcome under perfect competition with the outcome
under monopoly
Briefly explain the purpose of competition policy
Calculate & graph
TR, MR, AR
Equilibrium
Natural monopolies
Chapter 11 Review questions
1. What is the relationship between marginal cost and marginal revenue
when a single-price monopoly maximises profit?
2. How does a single-price monopoly determine the price it will charge its
customers?
3. What is the relationship between price, marginal revenue, and marginal
cost when a single-price monopoly is maximising profit?
4. Why can a monopoly make a positive economic profit even in the long
run?
5. Can a monopoly make a loss in long run?
6. Using the table on the next slide, draw a graph showing the monopoly's
output & profit
Answer to no.6
Semester test reflections…..
Your success in Economics 112 depends on your inputs, through active
self-study.
Independent study and preparation of the learning material before
each lecture are both essential. There is however a vast difference
between the reading of economic texts and studying and understanding
economics.
When you study economics, you need to learn actively. Reading is not
enough. You will need to question and analyse the text critically and
evaluate yourself with self-testing and assignments, on a regular basis.
Do not merely memorise, but ensure that you also understand the
work. Make it a game. For instance, when a graph shows what happens
when prices increase, try to sketch a graph in which it declines and
determine what the results are going to be. When an equation is used in
the work, make your own calculation and try to apply it.
Cont…..
Also, try to establish where the subsection fits into the entire picture. At
the end, you need to ask yourself what have you learnt and how does it
link up with the rest of the total module material.
Ensure that you are able to define each term that you met along the way.
It is often best to learn definitions by heart, word for word, but you
should also be able to translate it in your own words in order to
understand and apply it
Try to study some of this module every day. A little bit of work, each
day has much more value than a crash course the night before a test.
(It just does not work that way and you will be sure to fail!)