3. A firm is a monopoly if . . .
◦ it is the only seller of its product, and
◦ its product does not have close substitutes.
4. The fundamental cause of monopoly is the
existence of barriers to entry.
Barriers to entry have three sources:
◦ Ownership of a key resource.
◦ The government gives a firm the exclusive right to
produce some good.
◦ Costs of production make one producer more efficient
than a large number of producers (Natural Monopoly)
5. Although exclusive ownership of a key resource is
a potential source of monopoly, in practice
monopolies rarely arise for this reason.
Example: Diamond
6. Governments may restrict entry by giving one firm
the exclusive right to sell a particular goods in
certain markets.
Example: Patent and copyright laws are two important
examples of how governments create monopoly to serve
the public interest.
7. An industry is a natural monopoly when one firm
can supply a good or service to an entire market at
a lower cost than could two or more firms.
In other words, natural monopoly is an industry in
which economies of scale are so important so that
only one firm can survive.
Example: delivery of electricity, phone service, tap water,
etc.
8. A natural monopoly arises
when there are economies
of scale over the relevant
range of output.
Quantity of Output
Average
total
cost
0
Cost
9. Quantity of Output
Demand
(a) A Competitive Firm’s Demand Curve (b) A Monopolist’s Demand Curve
0
Price
Quantity of Output0
Price
Demand
12. An unregulated natural monopoly would attempt to
maximize profits by producing the quantity of
output where marginal revenue equals marginal
cost. (MC=MR)
13.
14. Exploitation to customers
Excessive profitability strengthen the monopoly
power
Inequitable distribution of resources
Operational inefficiency, etc
If so, How to curve????
15. The optimal quantity of output occurs where price
equals marginal cost. (P=MC)
Thus, marginal social benefit equals marginal
social cost.
16.
17. Producing the profit-maximizing output causes a
deadweight loss.
The deadweight loss is equal to the area between
the demand curve and the marginal cost curve for
the amount of underproduction.
Deadweight loss: The costs to society created by market inefficiency due to
inefficient allocation of resources. Price ceilings, price floors, and taxation are all
said to create deadweight losses. Deadweight loss occurs when supply and
demand are not in equilibrium.
21. If a natural monopoly is regulated to produce the
optimal quantity of output, the firm will suffer an
economic loss.
To keep the monopoly firm to survive would
require a government subsidy to the firm to
eliminate the economic loss.
Economic loss: The difference between the revenue received from the sale of an
output and the opportunity cost of the inputs used.
25. To avoid the need for a subsidy, natural monopolies
are often regulated to earn zero economic profit (a
normal rate of return).
But, this leads the following problems:
1. The natural monopoly lacks incentives to control
costs. (price may go up as cost)
2. The regulators may not be able to obtain
accurate information.
27. To overcome the monopoly power or the inefficiency
of monopoly firm or the inefficient allocation of
resources, government can play a significant role to
balance the social benefits and the costs through
subsidy to the firm or determining the zero economic
profit. (Profit constraints – normal rate of return, price
ceiling, etc.