6355 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Marginal Revenue, Deadweight Loss, Rent-Seeking

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Week 6 – Competition, Monopoly, and Efficiency
Monopoly: the only seller of a good or service that does not have a close substitute
- High barriers to entry
- Usually economic profit in both the shirt run and the long run
Why do Monopolies arise?
- Lack of competition created by barrier to entry
- The main reasons for high barriers to entry are:
- Government blocks the entry of more than one firm into a market (e.g. patent or
copyright; public franchise)
- One firm has control of a key resource material/technology necessary to produce a
good
- There are important network externalities in supplying the good or service
- Product differentiation and brand loyalty
- Large set-up costs
- Economies of scale are so large that one firm has a natural monopoly
- E.g. Australian pay TV
Monopoly is a price maker. It does not face a horizontal demand curve
- Both its demand curve and marginal revenue curve are downward sloping; and
marginal revenue curve is positioned below its demand curve
- An increase in production by a monopolist has two opposing effects on revenue:
1. A Quantity Effect: One more unit is sold, increasing total revenue by the
price at which the unit is sold
2. A Price Effect: in order to sell the last unit, the monopolist must cut the
market price on all units sold. This decreases total revenue.
Demand and Marginal Revenue
- Profit maximising monopolies will never produce at an output in the inelastic range
of its demand curve
- It could charge a higher price, producing a smaller quantity, and earn a larger profit
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Document Summary

Monopoly: the only seller of a good or service that does not have a close substitute. Usually economic profit in both the shirt run and the long run. Lack of competition created by barrier to entry. The main reasons for high barriers to entry are: Government blocks the entry of more than one firm into a market (e. g. patent or copyright; public franchise) One firm has control of a key resource material/technology necessary to produce a good. There are important network externalities in supplying the good or service. Economies of scale are so large that one firm has a natural monopoly. It does not face a horizontal demand curve. Both its demand curve and marginal revenue curve are downward sloping; and marginal revenue curve is positioned below its demand curve. Profit maximising monopolies will never produce at an output in the inelastic range of its demand curve.

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