Monopoly Flashcards

1
Q

What is a pure monopolist

A

A single supplier that dominates the entire market

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2
Q

What is a working monopoly

A

Any firm with greater than 25% of the industries total sales

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3
Q

What is a dominant firm

A

A firm that has at least 40% market share

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4
Q

To who is price setting power available to

A

Any business with a downward-sloping demand curve

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5
Q

What profits do a monopoly make

A

Supernormal profits

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6
Q

Is a monopoly a price maker or taker

A

Maker

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7
Q

AR and MR curves for a monopoly

A

Downward sloping - they price setting / making powers

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8
Q

Can monopolies set prices or quantities

A

One or the other but not both

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9
Q

Monopoly assumptions

A

Potential for price discrimination
Imperfect information
Profit maximisation

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10
Q

Why do firms with market power often not profit maximise

A

One of their aims is to maintain their market share

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11
Q

What is an alternative objective for a monopoly

A

Revenue maximisation

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12
Q

What is a natural monopoly

A

When there cannot be more than one efficient provider of a good

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13
Q

What is a natural monopoly characterised by

A

Increasing returns to scale at all levels of output

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14
Q

What happens as a result of a natural monopoly having increasing returns to scale at all levels of output

A

LRAC will drift lower as production expands - LRAC is falling because LRMC is below LRAC

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15
Q

Analysis of profit maximisation for a natural monopoly: costs

A

High fixed costs involved in supplying that the LRAC curve may fall continuously as output increases in the LR

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16
Q

Analysis of profit maximisation for a natural monopoly: profit maximising output

A

Likely to be highly allocatively inefficient since price is significantly above MC and output is restricted

17
Q

Analysis of profit maximisation for a natural monopoly: if it is state-owned

A

Prices are capped at MC in order to increase supply / affordability, losses may be made then

18
Q

Economic case against monopoly

A
  • higher prices
  • lack of production efficiency
  • lack of economies of scale
  • protected markets = less dynamic efficiency
19
Q

What are the problems with a monopoly getting too big

A

Diseconomies of scale = rising LR AC

20
Q

When does X-inefficiency occur

A

When a business produced at a higher unit cost than if there was genuine actual competition in a market

21
Q

Advantages from a monopoly

A
  • profits to fund investment and research
  • natural monopoly - economies of scale
  • domestic monopoly faces global competition
  • they can be regulated
  • price discrimination can help some consumers
22
Q

Policies to regulate monopoly power

A

Tax on profits
Liberalisation of markets
Price capping policies
Nationalisation

23
Q

Why would we place a tax on monopoly profits

A

Tax supernormal profits

24
Q

Why would we liberalise markets

A

Break up monopolies - allow smaller businesses to enter and increased contestability

25
Q

Why would we introduce price capping policies

A

Encourages cost efficiency and increases consumer surplus

26
Q

Why would we encourage nationalisation

A

Take some monopoly utilities back into public ownership

27
Q

Evaluation on taxing monopoly profits

A

Risk of tax avoidance / loss of capital investment spending

28
Q

Evaluation on the liberalisation of markets

A

Smaller businesses may struggle to scale up and compete

29
Q

Evaluation on introducing price capping policies

A

Monopolists may find revenues in other ways

30
Q

Evaluation of nationalisation

A

Possible loss of productive efficiency

31
Q

When does liberalisation happen

A

When policies seek to lower the entry barriers into a market with the result that new businesses enter and make an industry more contestable

32
Q

What can regulation act as

A

A form of surrogate competition - attempting to ensure that prices, profits and service quality are similar to what could be achieved in competitive markets

33
Q

Problems with regulation

A

Not always effective and can give rise to regulatory failure