CH 24 Monopoly
CH 24 Monopoly
CH 24 Monopoly
Monopoly
Pure Monopoly
• A monopoly is a single supplier to a market.
– Single Seller—the firm is the industry.
– No Substitutes—the product is unique.
– “Price Maker”—the firm can set whatever price
(or quantity) only subject to the market
demand.
– Barriers to Entry—there are barriers preventing
potential competitors from entering the market.
Barriers to Entry
• Barriers to entry are the sources of all
monopoly power.
– Technical Barriers to Entry
– Legal Barriers to Entry
– Strategic Barriers to Entry
Technical Barriers to Entry
• Economies of Scale or Scope: Production may exhibit
decreasing marginal and average costs over a wide
range of output levels or varieties.
– Natural Monopoly argument: To achieve low costs and low
prices, it is better to have a few large firms (and in the
extreme case, only one firm).
∆p (q )q + p (q )∆q
• Quantity Setting: MR =
∆q
∆p (q )
= q + p(q)
∆q
MC = c
∆p (q )
∴ q + p (q ) = c
∆q
Inverse-Elasticity Rule
• Inverse-Elasticity Rule
p−c 1
=
p ε
∆Q P
where ε = − .
∆P Q
AC
P* P*=AC
D D
MR MR
Q* Quantity Q* Quantity
Price
If this market was competitive, output
would be Q* and price would be P*
Under a monopoly, output would be
P**
Q** and price would rise to P**
P* MC=AC
∆
MR
Q** Q* Quantity
DWL from Monopoly Pricing
There is a deadweight
D
ΜΡ loss from monopoly
Q** Q* Quantity
Calculating Monopoly Profit
• Suppose that the market for Frisbees has a
linear demand curve of the form
Q = 2,000 – 20P
or
P = 100 – Q/20
• The total costs of the Frisbee producer are
given by
C(Q) = 0.05Q2 + 10,000
• To maximize profits, the monopolist chooses
the output for which MR = MC
• In this case
MR = – bQ+ a – bQ
= a – 2bQ
• Profit maximization requires that
MR = MC
a – 2bQ = c
Q* = (a – c)/2b
p(y)
p(y*)
MC(y)
y* y
MR(y)
$/output unit
p(y)
MC(y) + t
p(y*) t
MC(y)
y* y
MR(y)
$/output unit
p(y)
p(yt) MC(y) + t
p(y*) t
MC(y)
yt y* y
MR(y)
The quantity tax causes a drop
$/output unit
in the output level, a rise in the
output’s price and a decline in
p(y) demand for inputs.
p(yt) MC(y) + t
p(y*) t
MC(y)
yt y* y
MR(y)
Tax Pass-Through
• Can a monopolist “pass” all of a $t quantity
tax to the consumers?
• Suppose the marginal cost of production is
constant at $c per unit.
• With no tax, the monopolist’s price is
p* − c 1
= *
p *
ε
ε*
∴ p = c
*
.
ε −1
*
• The tax increases marginal cost to $(c+t) per
unit, changing the profit-maximizing price to
εt
p=
t
(c + t ) .
ε −1
t
p − p
t *
εt ε*
p − p =(c + t )
t *
− c
ε −1
t
ε * −1
1 1
=(c + t )(1 + t ) − c(1 + * )
ε −1 ε −1
1 1 1
= c ( t − * ) + t (1 + t )
ε −1 ε −1 ε −1