Chapter 12 Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the industry characteristics of perfect competition. [6]

A
  • Many small firms
  • Firms sell identical products
  • All firms are price takers
  • Free entry and exit
  • Zero profits in long-run equilibrium
  • Price = MC
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2
Q

Describe the industry characteristics of monopolistic competition. [6]

A
  • Many small firms
  • Firms sell differentiated product
  • Each firm has some power to set price
  • Free entry and exit
  • Zero profits in long-run equilibrium
  • Price > MC; less output than in perfect competition; excess capacity
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3
Q

Describe industry characteristics of oligopoly. [7]

A
  • Few firms, usually large
  • Strategeic behaviour among firms
  • Firms often sell differentiated products and are price setters
  • Often significant entry barriers
  • Usually economies of scale
  • Profits depend on the nature of firm rivalry and on entry barriers
  • Price usually > MC; output is usually less than in perfect competition.
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4
Q

Describe the industry characteristics of monopoly. [4]

A
  • Single firm faces the entire market demand
  • Firm is a price setter
  • Profits persist if sufficient entry barriers
  • Price > MC; less output than in perfect competition
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5
Q

What is productive efficiency for the firm and for the industry?

A
  • Productive efficiency for the firm requires the firm to be producing its output at the lowest possible cost.
  • Productive efficiency for the industry requires that the marginal cost of production be the same for each firm.
  • If firms and industries are productively efficient, the economy will be on, rather than inside, the production possibilities boundary.
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6
Q

What is allocative efficiency? [3]

A
  • A situation in which the output of each good is suh that its market price and marginal cost are equal
  • When utility-maximizing consumers face their market price for some good, they adjust their consumption of the good until their marginal value is just equal to the price.
  • Price reflects the marginal value to consumers.
  • If the level of output of some good is such that marginal cost to producers exceeds marginal value to consumers, too much of that good is being produced.
  • If the level of output of some good is such that the marginal cost to producers is less than the marginal value, too little of the good is being produced.
  • When the combination of goods produced is allocatively efficient, economists say that the economy is Pareto efficient.
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7
Q

Is perfect competition efficient?

A
  • In long-run equilibrium, each perfectly competitive firm is producing at the lowest point on its LRAC curve. Every profit maximizing firm is productively efficient.
  • All firms face the same market price and equate their own marginal cost to the price, so marginal cost is equal across are firms. The industry as a whole is productively efficient.
  • If perfect competition were the market structure for the whole economy, P = MC in each industry, resulting in allocative efficiency across the entire economy.
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8
Q

Is monopoly efficient?

A
  • A monopolist’s profits are maximized when it adopts the lowest-cost production method, so a profit-maximizing monopolist operates on its LRAC curve and will be productively efficient.
  • Since the firm is alone in the industry, the industry is also productively efficient.
  • P > MC, so the monopoly is not allocatively efficient.
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9
Q

Are monopolistic competition and oligopoly efficient?

A
  • Maximize profits when they adopt the lowest-cost production method, so they operate on their LRAC curves and are productively efficient.
  • It is impossible to conclude whether the industry is productively efficient since all firms sell differentiated products and there is no single industry-wide price.
  • P > MC, so neither market structure is allocatively efficient.
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10
Q

How does a monopolist generate deadweight loss?

A

By restricting output below the competitive level.

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11
Q

What is market failure?

A
  • Market failure occurs when market economies fail to produce efficient outcomes.
  • Market transactions may impose costs or confer benefits on economic agents who are not involved in the transaction
  • Cases like these are called externalities because they involve economic costs or benefits for parties that are external to the transaction.
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12
Q

Describe regulation of natural monopolies.

A
  • One response to natural monopoly is for the government to assume ownership of the firm (crown corporations)
  • Another response to the problem of natural monopoly is to allow private ownership but to regulate the monopolist’s behaviour.
  • Three general types of pricing policies exist for regulated natural monopolies: marginal cost pricing, two-part tariffs, and average-cost pricing.
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13
Q

Describe marginal cost pricing in response to natural monopoly.

A
  • Price is set where the market demand curve and the marginal cost curve intersect.
  • The outcome is allocatively efficient.
  • The monopoly suffers losses.
  • When a natural monopoly with falling average costs sets price equal to marginal cost, the outcome is allocatively efficient but the firm will suffer losses.
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14
Q

Describe two-part tariffs in response to natural monopoly.

A
  • The situation of losses with marginal-cost pricing cannot be sustained for long.
  • A two-part tariff: customers pay one price to gain access to the product and a secondd price for each unit consumed.
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15
Q

Describe average-cost pricing in response to natural monopoly.

A
  • Average-cost pricing allows the natural monopoly to set prices just high enough to cover total costs, thus generating neither profits nor losses.
  • The firm produces the level of output at which the demand curve cuts the LRAC curve.
  • For a natural monopoly with falling average costs, a policy of average-cost pricing will not result in allocative efficiency because price exceeds marginal cost.
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16
Q

Describe long-run investment and very long-run innovation in regulation of natural monopolies.

A
  • For natural monopolies, average-cost pricing often leads to inefficient long-run investment decisions with too little capital being built.
  • Innovation can erode market power through ‘creative destruction’ (ex. telecommunications industry)
17
Q

Describe problems with regulations of natural monopolies. [3]

A
  • Regulators cannot precisely determine demand
  • Price regulation turns into profit regulation (or rate-of-return regulation)
  • Concepts of marginal cost and allocative efficiency are often ignored in regulatory decisions.
18
Q

Describe illegal actions in Canada regarding competition policy. [3]

A
  1. Price-fixing agreements that unduly lessen competition
  2. Mergers or monopolies that operate to the detriment of the public interest
  3. ‘unfair’ trade practices.
19
Q

The ongoing process of globalization poses what two challenges for Canadian competition policy?

A
  1. Globalization means it is more important to define markets on an international rather than a national basis.
  2. Firms will locate in countries with lax competition policy which incentivizes countries to standardize their competition policy.
20
Q

How was the Competition Act in Canada amended in 2009? [4]

A
  1. Increase penalties for deception in marketing
  2. Move toward greater prosecution of significant cartel agreements
  3. Introduce a two-stage merger review process
  4. Monetary penalties for abusing a dominant position in the marketplace