ECN 104 Chapter Notes - Chapter 13: Monopolistic Competition, Natural Monopoly, Demand Curve

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Perfect competition- many producers, goods are identical. Oligopoly- a few producers, goods are identical and differentiated. Monopolistic competition- many producers- goods are differentiated. A monopolist is a firm where there is only one producer producing the goods and there are no close substitutes for that product. An industry controlled by a monopolist is called a monopoly. The ability of a monopolist to raise the product"s price above the competitive level by reducing output is called market power. A monopolist has market power, which means they can increase price and reduce the output produced. This output would be less than the output in a competitive industry. This ends up making the monopolist profit, both in the short-run and the long run. Profits will not continue in the long run unless there is a barrier to entry. A natural monopoly occurs when increasing returns to scale provide a large cost advantage to one firm that produces all of the industry"s output.

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