ECON 200 Chapter Notes - Chapter 15: Monopoly Profit, Marginal Revenue, Demand Curve

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Monopoly: a firm that is the sole seller of a product without close substitutes. Monopoly resources: a key resource required for production is owned by one firm: rare because of world markets. (diamonds/water in a small town?) Government regulation: government gives one firm the exclusive right to produce a good or service: patent(20 years)-meds or original invention- high prices to encourage research, copyright- book or written work- high prices to encourage more writing. After each entry, the profit decreases because they still need to pay the fixed cost, and have to split the benefits with others. Monopolies can alter the price of its good by adjusting the quantity supplied. Competitive firms: horizontal demand curve (market price) (perfectly elastic) Monopoly: demand curve is the market demand curve. Choose anywhere on the demand curve to produce at. Marginal revenue: (change in tr / change in quantity) A monopolist"s marginal revenue is always less than the price of its good.

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