Title: Monopoly
1Lecture 9
2Pure Monopoly
- A monopolized market has a single seller.
- The monopolists demand curve is the (downward
sloping) market demand curve. - So the monopolist can alter the market price by
adjusting its output level.
3Pure Monopoly
/output unit
Higher output q causes alower market price, p(q).
p(q)
Output Level, q
4Why Monopolies?
- What causes monopolies?
- Government intervention
5Why Monopolies?
- What causes monopolies?
- government intervention
- a patent e.g. a new drug
6Why Monopolies?
- What causes monopolies?
- government intervention
- a patent e.g. a new drug
- sole ownership of a resource e.g. a toll highway
7Why Monopolies?
- What causes monopolies?
- government intervention
- a patent e.g. a new drug
- sole ownership of a resource e.g. a toll highway
- formation of a cartel e.g. OPEC
8Why Monopolies?
- What causes monopolies?
- government intervention
- a patent e.g. a new drug
- sole ownership of a resource e.g. a toll highway
- formation of a cartel e.g. OPEC
- large economies of scale e.g. local utility
companies.
9Pure Monopoly
- Suppose that the monopolist seeks to maximize its
economic profit, - What output level q maximizes profit?
10(No Transcript)
11TR,TC
TC
TR
q
p
? max
q
12p
q
MR,MC
MC
MR
q
13Markup pricing
/output unit
p(q)
p(q)
MC(q)
q
q
MR(q)
14The Inefficiency of Monopoly
/output unit
The efficient output levelqe satisfies p(q)
MC(q).
p(q)
MC(q)
p(qe)
q
qe
15The Inefficiency of Monopoly
/output unit
The efficient output levelqe satisfies p(q)
MC(q).
p(q)
CS
MC(q)
p(qe)
q
qe
16The Inefficiency of Monopoly
/output unit
The efficient output levelqe satisfies p(q)
MC(q).
p(q)
CS
MC(q)
p(qe)
PS
q
qe
17The Inefficiency of Monopoly
/output unit
p(q)
p(q)
MC(q)
q
q
MR(q)
18The Inefficiency of Monopoly
/output unit
p(q)
CS
p(q)
MC(q)
q
q
MR(q)
19The Inefficiency of Monopoly
/output unit
p(q)
CS
p(q)
MC(q)
PS
q
q
MR(q)
20The Inefficiency of Monopoly
The monopolist produces less than the efficient
quantity, making the market price exceed the
efficient market price.
/output unit
p(q)
p(q)
MC(q)
DWL
p(qe)
q
q
qe
MR(q)
21Natural Monopoly
- A natural monopoly arises when the firms
technology has economies-of-scale large enough
for it to supply the whole market at a lower
average total production cost than is possible
with more than one firm in the market.
22Natural Monopoly
/output unit
ATC(q)
p(q)
MC(q)
q
23Natural Monopoly
/output unit
ATC(q)
p(q)
p(q)
MC(q)
q
q
MR(q)
24Entry Deterrence by a Natural Monopoly
- A natural monopoly deters entry by threatening
predatory pricing against an entrant. - A predatory price is a low price set by the
incumbent firm when an entrant appears, causing
the entrants economic profits to be negative and
inducing its exit.
25Entry Deterrence by a Natural Monopoly
- E.g. suppose an entrant initially captures
one-quarter of the market, leaving the incumbent
firm the other three-quarters.
26Entry Deterrence by a Natural Monopoly
/output unit
ATC(q)
p(q), total demand DI DE
DE
DI
MC(q)
q
27Entry Deterrence by a Natural Monopoly
/output unit
An entrant can undercut theincumbents price
p(q) but ...
ATC(q)
p(q), total demand DI DE
DE
p(q)
DI
pE
MC(q)
q
28Entry Deterrence by a Natural Monopoly
/output unit
An entrant can undercut theincumbents price
p(q) but
ATC(q)
p(q), total demand DI DE
the incumbent can then lower its price as
far as pI, forcing
the entrant
to exit.
DE
p(q)
DI
pE
pI
MC(q)
q
29Inefficiency of a Natural Monopolist
- Like any profit-maximizing monopolist, the
natural monopolist causes a deadweight loss.
30Inefficiency of a Natural Monopoly
/output unit
ATC(q)
p(q)
p(q)
MC(q)
q
q
MR(q)
31Inefficiency of a Natural Monopoly
/output unit
ATC(q)
Profit-max MR(q) MC(q) Efficiency p MC(q)
p(q)
p(q)
MC(q)
p(qe)
q
qe
q
MR(q)
32Inefficiency of a Natural Monopoly
/output unit
ATC(q)
Profit-max MR(q) MC(q) Efficiency p MC(q)
p(q)
p(q)
DWL
MC(q)
p(qe)
q
qe
q
MR(q)
33Regulating a Natural Monopoly
- Why not command that a natural monopoly produce
the efficient amount of output? - Then the deadweight loss will be zero, wont it?
34Regulating a Natural Monopoly
/output unit
At the efficient outputlevel qe, ATC(qe) gt p(qe)
ATC(q)
p(q)
MC(q)
ATC(qe)
p(qe)
qe
q
MR(q)
35Regulating a Natural Monopoly
/output unit
At the efficient outputlevel qe, ATC(qe) gt
p(qe)so the firm makes aneconomic loss.
ATC(q)
p(q)
MC(q)
ATC(qe)
Economic loss
p(qe)
qe
q
MR(q)
36Regulating a Natural Monopoly
- So a natural monopoly cannot be forced to use
marginal cost pricing. Doing so makes the firm
exit, destroying both the market and any
gains-to-trade. - Regulatory schemes can induce the natural
monopolist to produce the efficient output level
without exiting.
37How Should a Monopoly Price?
- So far a monopoly has been thought of as a firm
which has to sell its product at the same price
to every customer. This is uniform pricing. - Can price-discrimination earn a monopoly higher
profits?
38Types of Price Discrimination
- 1st-degree Each output unit is sold at a
different price. Prices may differ across
buyers. - 3rd-degree Price paid by buyers in a given group
is the same for all units purchased. But price
may differ across buyer groups.E.g., senior
citizen and student discounts vs. no discounts
for middle-aged persons.
39First-degree Price Discrimination
- Each output unit is sold at a different price.
Price may differ across buyers. - It requires that the monopolist can discover the
buyer with the highest valuation of its product,
the buyer with the next highest valuation, and so
on.
40First-degree Price Discrimination
/output unit
Sell the th unit for
MC(q)
p(q)
q
41First-degree Price Discrimination
/output unit
Sell the th unit for Later onsell
the th unit for
MC(q)
p(q)
q
42First-degree Price Discrimination
/output unit
Sell the th unit for Later onsell
the th unit for Finally
sell the th unit for marginal
cost,
MC(q)
p(q)
q
43First-degree Price Discrimination
The gains to the monopoliston these trades
areand zero.
/output unit
MC(q)
p(q)
q
The consumers gains are zero.
44Third-degree Price Discrimination
- Price paid by buyers in a given group is the same
for all units purchased. But price may differ
across buyer groups.
45Third-degree Price Discrimination
- A monopolist manipulates market price by altering
the quantity of product supplied to that market. - So the question What discriminatory prices will
the monopolist set, one for each group? is
really the question How many units of product
will the monopolist supply to each group?
46Third-degree Price Discrimination
- Two markets, 1 and 2.
- q1 is the quantity supplied to market 1. Market
1s inverse demand function is p1(q1). - q2 is the quantity supplied to market 2. Market
2s inverse demand function is p2(q2). - The monopolists profit is the sum of profits in
both markets. What quantities sold maximize this
profit?
47Third-degree Price Discrimination
Market 1
Market 2
p1(q1)
p2(q2)
p1(q1)
p2(q2)
MC
MC
q1
q2
q1
q2
MR1(q1)
MR2(q2)
MR1(q1) MR2(q2) MC, p1(q1)?p2(q2)