ECN 104 Chapter Notes - Chapter 13: Price Discrimination, Root Mean Square, Deadweight Loss

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A monopolist is a rm that is the only producer of a good that has no close substitutes. An industry controlled by a monopolist is known as a monopoly (eg. The ability of a monopolist to raise its price above the competitive level by reducing output known as market power. This generates pro t for the monopolist in the short and long run. In order to develop principles and make predictions about markets and how producers will behave in them. Economists have developed four principal models of market structure: perfect competition, monopoly, oligopoly, monopolistic competition. Based on two dimensions: the number of producers in the market (eg. One, few, or many: whether the goods offered are identical or differentiated. Differentiated goods are goods that are different but considered somewhat substitutable by consumers (eg. A monopolist has market power and as a result will charge higher prices and produce less output than a competitive industry.

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