Chapter 11
Monopoly
By Boundless
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Control over a natural resource that is critical to the production of a final good is one source of monopoly power.
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Economies of scale and network externalities discourage potential competitors from entering a market.
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There are two types of government-initiated monopoly: a government monopoly and a government-granted monopoly.
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The government creates legal barriers through patents, copyrights, and granting exclusive rights to companies.
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Natural monopolies occur when a single firm can serve the entire market at a lower cost than a combination of two or more firms.
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Firms gain monopolistic power as a result of markets' barriers to entry, which discourage potential competitors.
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Monopolies, as opposed to perfectly competitive markets, have high barriers to entry and a single producer that acts as a price maker.
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For monopolies, marginal cost curves are upward sloping and marginal revenues are downward sloping.
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Monopolies set marginal cost equal to marginal revenue in order to maximize profit.
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To maximize output, monopolies produce the quantity at which marginal supply is equal to marginal cost.
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Monopolies can influence a good's price by changing output levels, which allows them to make an economic profit.
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A monopoly generates less surplus and is less efficient than a competitive market, and therefore results in deadweight loss.
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In economics, deadweight loss is a loss of economic efficiency that occurs when equilibrium for a good or service is not Pareto optimal.
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In a competitive market, price discrimination occurs when identical goods and services are sold at different prices by the same provider.
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Price discrimination is present in commerce when sellers adjust the price on the same product in order to make the most revenue possible.
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The purpose of price discrimination is to capture the market's consumer surplus and generate the most revenue possible for a good.
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A monopoly can diminish consumer choice, reduce incentives to innovate, and control supply to enforce inequitable prices in a society.
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Antitrust laws ensure that competitive environments are preserved in order to maintain an efficient and equitable capitalistic system.
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Natural monopolies are conducive to industries where the largest supplier derives cost advantages and must be regulated to minimize risks.