Module 7 Flashcards

1
Q

What is a natural monopoly? (2 points)

A

a) Economies of scale are so large that one firm can supply the entire market at a lower average cost than two or more firms.
b) ATC curve is still declining at the point where it crosses the demand curve.

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2
Q

What is the narrow definition of a monopoly?

A

A firm is a monopoly if it can ignore the actions of all other firms.

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3
Q

What is the general definition of a monopoly?

A
  • The firm is able to earn an economic profit in the long run
  • A firm that is the only seller of a good or service for which there is not a close substitute
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4
Q

What are the 4 barriers to entry?

A
  1. Government (i.e. patents, public franchises)
  2. Key resource is controlled by one firm
  3. Network externalities
  4. Natural monopoly
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5
Q

How does a monopoly decide how much to produce at what price?

A

Q: where MR = MC
P: where Q hits the demand curve

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6
Q

What is price discrimination?

A

Charging different prices to different people for the same good or service when the price differences are not due to differences in cost.

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7
Q

What needs to be true in order to price discriminate?

A
  • must have market power
  • must be able to segment the market to prevent arbitrage
  • customers must have different willingness to pay, and the firm must know this and the P to charge them
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8
Q

What is the Law of One Price

A

Basically that arbitrage will enforce a single price on the market.

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9
Q

What are industry terms for price discrimination?

A

Yield management
Price optimization
Dynamic pricing

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10
Q

What is perfect price discrimination?

A

When the monopoly can charge everyone exactly according to their willingness to pay.

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11
Q

Why are monopolies generally innefficient?

A

When monopolies cannot perfectly price discriminate, there’s a deadweight loss due to them not producing at their most efficient output. (they produce where MR = MC, not where MC = P)

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12
Q

Since perfect price discrimination makes monopolies produce at the efficient level, what’s the loss to society?

A

Consumers are worse off because the entire consumer surplus is taken by the monopoly.

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13
Q

When does a monopoly produce at MC = P

A

In perfect price discrimination.

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14
Q

What is price discrimination across time?

A

Charging a higher price when a product is first introduced and a lower price later.

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15
Q

Is price discrimination legal?

A

Basically if it increases or doesn’t affect competition, it’s OK, as long as the discrimination is not based on a protected trait such as race.

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16
Q

What is another term for perfect price discrimination?

A

First degree price discrimination.

17
Q

What is second degree price discrimination?

A

done in blocks

18
Q

What form of second degree price discrimination does Costco use?

A

Two-part tariffs.

19
Q

Which were the first two anti-trust laws (USA & Canada)?

A

Competition Act - Canada - 1889
Sherman Act - USA - 1890

20
Q

Which Canadian governing body deals with monopolies?

A

Competition Bureau of Canada

21
Q

What are two important considerations when looking at whether a monopoly is good or not?

A

Definition of the market
Possible increases in economic efficiency

22
Q

What are the three guidelines used to see if a monopoly should be broken up?

A
  • Market definition - if all firms in that market increased price, would they make more or less $ (because there’s no close substitutes)
  • Measure of concentration - Herfindahl-Hirschman Index
  • Merger standards
23
Q

What’s the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index?

A

An index of how concentrated a market is, and how concentrated it would be after a potential merger. Want to keep it below 2,500, changes themselves below 100. Sum of squares of all market shares (not just the merging firms).

24
Q

How do we set a government price for a natural monopoly?

A

Must set at P (demand) = ATC.

25
Q

Why can’t we force natural monopolies to produce and sell at the price where MC = MR?

A

For a natural monopoly, ATC will still be dropping when it crosses the demand curve, meaning that it hasn’t yet crossed MC, so P=MC will be below ATC, and so the firm will incur a loss.

26
Q

What’s the rule of thumb for pricing?

A

(P-MC)/P = 1/E
where E is the price elasticity of demand
perfect competition: = 1/infinity
perfectly inelastic demand: = 1/0

27
Q

How do we set price for a monopoly that isn’t a natural monopoly?

A

Since ATC is rising again, but below MC as it crosses D for a monopoly that isn’t a natural monopoly, we set P = MC = D.

28
Q

Why is MR always below D for suppliers who are price-makers?

A

MR < D for suppliers who are price-makers because the output effect increases total revenue while the price effect lowers total revenue.