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Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13

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Page 1: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Lecture 11: Monopoly

Readings: Chapter 13

Page 2: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive

model of supply?

A: Very few industries have firms that resemble

the price taking small producers of the perfect

competitive model.

Q: Is the model of perfect competition wrong?

A: All models are wrong in the literal sense. The

important question is whether the model is

useful.

Page 3: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: In what sense is the model of supply under

perfect competition useful?

A: There are a number of general insights:

Firms maximize profits by setting output

strategies where the MR=MC.

Losses cause exit and shift the supply

curve to the left over the long run.

Profits cause entry and shift supply to the

right over the long run.

Page 4: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: Does the model of perfect competition fail?

A: The model does not explain: Pricing strategies in industries with few

competitors?

Non-price strategies (advertising, product differentiation, R&D, etc.)

Strategic interdependence between firms.

Page 5: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: How can we get a better understanding of

pricing strategies?

A: The simplest model that investigates pricing

strategy is the model of a monopoly supplier.

Monopoly will be our starting point from which

we will proceed to a more detailed and complete

understanding of the theory of supply.

Page 6: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: What is a monopoly?

A: A Monopoly is an industry with one supplier of a

product with no close substitutes.

Q: When do monopolies occur?

A: Whenever there are barriers to entry.

Legal Monopolies (public franchise,

government license, patent, or copyright)

Natural Monopoly (IRS)

Page 7: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

The Theory of Supply - Monopoly

Q: What is the simplest type of monopoly?

A: A Single-price monopoly charges same price

for every unit of output.

Q: How is the single price monopoly’s problem

different from the perfectly competitive firm’s

problem?

A: In addition to deciding how much to produce,

the single price monopoly must decide what

price to charge for its good.continued

Page 8: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

The Theory of Supply - Monopoly

Q: Why can’t a firm in a perfectly industry

choose the price it sells its good for?

A: Because suppliers in a competitive industry

can sell as much as they want at the market

price, but cannot sell even one unit at any price

above the market price. (eg. Wheat farmer)

For a firm in a competitive industry, P = MR =

AR = firm’s demand curve.

A monopolist can choose the price it sells at.

Page 9: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: What is the monopolist’s MR?

A: Consider the problem of selling one more unit.

To do so, the monopolist must lower the price on

all units. This creates two impacts on revenue:

For those goods already being sold revenue

falls because of the lower price per unit.

The lower price also increases sales which

increases revenue.

The total impact is illustrated in the next diagram.

Page 10: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Figure 13.2 illustrates

the relationship

between price and

marginal revenue and

derives the marginal

revenue curve.

Suppose the monopoly

sets a price of $16 and

sells 2 units.

Monopoly

Page 11: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Now suppose the firm cuts the

price to $14 to sell 3 units.

It loses $4 of total revenue

on the 2 units it was selling

at $16 each.

And it gains $14 of total

revenue on the 3rd unit.

So total revenue

increases by $10, which is

marginal revenue.

Monopoly

Page 12: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

The marginal revenue

curve, MR, passes

through the red dot

midway between 2 and

3 units and at $10.

Notice that MR < P at

each quantity.

Monopoly

Page 13: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

A single-price

monopoly’s marginal

revenue is related to

the elasticity of

demand for its good:

If demand is elastic, a

fall in price brings an

increase in total

revenue.

Monopoly

Page 14: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

The increase in revenue

from the increase in

quantity sold outweighs the

decrease in revenue from

the lower price per unit, and

MR is positive.

As the price falls, total

revenue increases.

Monopoly

Page 15: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

If demand is inelastic, a fall

in price brings a decrease in

total revenue.

The rise in revenue from the

increase in quantity sold is

outweighed by the fall in

revenue from the lower price

per unit, and MR is negative.

Monopoly

Page 16: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

As the price falls,

total revenue

decreases.

Monopoly

Page 17: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

If demand is unit elastic, a fall

in price does not change total

revenue.

The rise in revenue from the

increase in quantity sold

equals the fall in revenue

from the lower price per unit,

and MR = 0.

Total revenue is maximized

when MR = 0.

Monopoly

Page 18: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Surprising Implication: A Monopoly will

always choose an output strategy where

Demand Is Elastic

A single-price monopoly never produces an

output at which demand is inelastic.

If it did produce such an output, the firm

could increase total revenue, decrease total

cost, and increase economic profit by

decreasing output.

Monopoly

Page 19: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: Does the monopoly choose a price that

maximizes revenue for the firm?

A: No! The monopoly must maximize profits to

satisfy its owners.

Q: What is the profit maximizing monopolist’s

best strategy?

A: Choose Q where π = TR - TC, and then set

the maximum price that will sell precisely this

many units of their output.

Page 20: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

The profit-maximizing

choice of a single-price

monopoly is Q=3,

where total revenue

minus total cost is

maximized

Monopoly

Page 21: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: What if the managers of monopoly do not

know the TR or TC curves. What will they do?

A: Follow the marginal algorithm for finding the

optimal strategy.

Increase Q if MR>MC

Decrease Q if MR<MC

Q is best when MR = MC

Page 22: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: What does such a strategy look like?

A: We can merge the market demand curve with

the firm’s average and total cost curves.

This is possible because a monopoly firm’s

demand is the full market demand.

Page 23: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

The firm chooses Q=3 where MR = MC and sets the price at which it can sell that quantity.

The ATC curve tells us the average total cost.

Economic profit is the profit per unit multiplied by the quantity produced—the blue rectangle.

Monopoly

Page 24: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Economicprofit $12

Economicprofit $12

3

30

42

3

10

14

(b) Demand, marginal revenue, marginal cost, and average cost

Monopoly

Textbook p. 266Copyright © 1997 Addison-Wesley Publishers Ltd.

TRTC

0 Q

TR,TC

0

20P

QDMR

ATC

MC

(a) Total revenue and total cost

Page 25: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: What does this model tell us about monopoly supply behaviour?

A: There are several interesting characteristics of monopoly supply:

A monopoly never operates in the inelastic range of the demand curve.

A monopoly has no supply curve.

Monopolistic firms make economic profits, even in long run, because barriers prevent entry new firms.

Page 26: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: What is missing from this analysis of

monopoly supply behaviour?

A: Monopolists only rarely charge a single price

for there product. It is more usual for

monopolists to price discriminate.

Q: What is price discrimination?

A: Charging different customers different prices,

for the same good.

Page 27: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: Why price discrimination?

A: Price discrimination increasing profits by identifying who will pay more than the current monopoly price, and charging them a higher price. It isn’t just monopolists who benefit from price discrimination. Examples include:

Airline ticket pricing Declining block pricing for electricity. Long-Distance Telephone rates.

Next Page: Three groups identified , three pricescontinued

Page 28: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Figure 12.4b A Monopoly’s Output and Price: Demandand Marginal Revenue and Cost Curves

Textbook p. 266Copyright © 1997 Addison-Wesley Publishers Ltd.

3

10

14

0 Q

20P

DMR

ATC

MC

Page 29: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: What is the most profitable price discrimination strategy?

A: Perfect price discrimination - Charge each customer the maximum price they are willing to pay (P= maximum willingness to pay)

Q: How much will a perfect price discriminating monopoly choose to supply?

A: It will depend on what the MR looks like under perfect price discrimination. Once we know what MR curve is, the most profitable Q is where MR=MC.

Page 30: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

If perfect price discrimination is possible, then

there is no need to reduce the price for all goods

sold if the monopoly wants to sell more. The

monopoly simply reduces the price to the new

consumers, while keeping the price to his

existing consumers unchanged.

Implications:

1. MR curve same as demand curve

2. Q is same as under perfect competition

Page 31: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Perfect price

discrimination occurs if a

firm is able to sell each

unit of output for the

highest price anyone is

willing to pay.

Marginal revenue now

equals price and the

demand curve is also the

marginal revenue curve.

Monopoly

Page 32: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

With perfect price

discrimination: The profit-

maximizing output

increases to the quantity at

which price equals marginal

cost.

Economic profit increases

above that made by a single-

price monopoly.

Monopoly

Page 33: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: Is perfect price discrimination a viable

strategy option?

A: No. It requires the firm to know what each

person is willing to pay for the good. The

consumer is unlikely to tell the monopolist this

information.

Q: What is a viable strategy option?

A: Identify a few groups, and develop a separate

monopoly strategy for each group.

Page 34: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Consider the case of an airline monopoly that has identified two traveling groups: Business Tourist

Suppose the profit maximizing strategy for the single price monopoly is to charge $1500.

If Business and Tourist travelers have a different price elasticity of demand at this price then profits can be increased by charging a different price to each group.

Page 35: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: How should the price strategy be changed?

A: Revenue will increase if you increase the price for customers who inelastically demand airline trips, while revenue can also rise if you drop the price for customers who elastically demand airline trips.

Business travelers are known to inelastically demand the good at this price

Tourist travelers are known to elastically demand

Page 36: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

But airlines are not revenue maximizers, they

are profit maximizers.

Q: What price should each group be charged if

the airline is to maximize profits?

A: For each group find where the MR curve

intersects the MC curve, supply that many seats

to that group, then go up to the demand curve to

find the maximum price that will sell all the

seats. (in following example MC is constant)

Page 37: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

$3.5m

Figure 12.6a Price Discrimination: Business Travellers

Textbook p. 269

Q0 6

P

MC

1,500

2,000

1,000

Copyright © 1997 Addison-Wesley Publishers Ltd.

DB

No pricediscriminationprofit $3m

MRB

5

1,700

Decrease in quantitydemanded

Page 38: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

$2.45 m

Figure 12.6b Price Discrimination: Vacation Travellers

Textbook p. 269

Q0

P

2,000

1,000

4

MC

1,500

DV

Copyright © 1997 Addison-Wesley Publishers Ltd.

No pricediscriminationprofit $2m

7

1,350

Increase inquantitydemanded

MRV

Page 39: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: Is that all the airline has to do to increase

profits by price discrimination?

A: No! The monopolist must make it impossible

for the low price consumers to sell to the high

price consumers.

Airlines do this by putting the customers

name on the ticket

Without prevention of resale, the strategy would

be destroyed by arbitraging (ie ticket scalping)

Page 40: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: How does a monopoly compare to a perfectly competitive industry?

A: For a single price monopolist:

Price is higher

Quantity supplied is lower

Consumer Surplus is lower

Deadweight Loss

Page 41: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Compared to perfect

competition,

monopoly produces

a smaller output and

charges a higher

price.

Monopoly

Page 42: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Perfect Competition produces more output at a lower price → Perfect Competition is more efficient.

Recall: The market demand curve is the marginal social benefit curve, MSB, and the market supply curve is the marginal social cost curve, MSC.

At competitive equilibrium MSB = MSC, and so the competitive market is efficient.

Monopoly

Page 43: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Consumer surplus is the area below the demand

curve and above the price.

Producer surplus is the

area below the price and

above the supply curve.

Total surplus, the sum of

the two surpluses, is

maximized and the

quantity produced is

efficient.

Monopoly

Page 44: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly produces less at a higher price.

Because price exceeds marginal social cost, marginal social benefit exceeds marginal social cost,

and a deadweight

loss arises.

Monopoly

Page 45: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Q: What happens

to the surpluses?

CS ↓

PS ↑

some surplus

disappears

completely (DWL)

Monopoly

Page 46: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: Should price discrimination be allowed?

A: If possible, price discrimination can be expected to:

Increase monopoly profits

Reduce consumer surplus for some, increase for others.

Increase QS towards perfect competition output level.

Deadweight Loss is lower

Exercise: Prove these at home.

Page 47: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: Is Monopoly really that bad?

A: It may be worse than we have shown:

The lure of monopoly creates wasteful rent seeking behavior.

Surplus is transferred from consumers to a small number of monopoly owners, which reduces the fairness of the market.

Monopoly creates inequality which can lead to wasteful social unrest.

Page 48: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

Monopoly

Q: What can be done?

A: There are two things governments can do:

Regulate prices when monopoly is

unavoidable (Natural Monopoly).

Deregulate when government regulations

have created un-necessary monopoly, or

when government regulation has reduced

competition.

Page 49: Lecture 11: Monopoly Readings: Chapter 13. Monopoly  Q: How realistic is the perfectly competitive model of supply?  A: Very few industries have firms

End of Lecture 11