monopoly
Market with only one seller.
monopsony
Market with only one buyer.
market power
Ability of a seller or buyer to affect the price of a good
Lerner Index of
Monopoly Power
Measure of monopoly power calculated as excess of
price over marginal cost as a fraction of price.
L= P-MC/P = -1/Ed
What 3 factors determine a firm’s monopoly power/ elasticity of demand?
If there is only one firm—a pure monopolist—its demand curve is…
…it is the market demand curve.
barriers to entry
Condition that impedes entry by new competitors.
rent seeking
Spending money in socially unproductive efforts to
acquire, maintain, or exercise monopoly
natural monopoly
Firm that can produce the entire output of the market at a
cost lower than what it would be if there were several firms
monopsony power
Buyer’s ability to affect the price of a good.
oligopsony
Market with only a few buyers.
antitrust laws
Rules and regulations prohibiting actions that restrain, or are likely to restrain, competition.
parallel conduct
Form of implicit collusion in which one firm consistently
follows actions of another.
predatory pricing
Practice of pricing to drive current competitors out of business and to discourage new entrants in a market so that a firm can enjoy higher future profits.
price discrimination
Practice of charging different prices to different
consumers for similar goods.
-used for vapturing even more of the CS
reservation price
Maximum price that a customer is willing to pay for a good.
first degree price discrimination
Practice of charging each customer her reservation price.
second-degree price
discrimination
Practice of charging different prices per unit for different
quantities of the same good or service.
third-degree price discrimination
Practice of dividing consumers into two or more groups with separate
demand curves and charging different prices to each group.
Perfect price discrimination:
profit from producing and selling an incremental unit is the difference between demand and marginal cost. pg 17
block pricing
Practice of charging different prices for different quantities or “blocks” of a good.
variable profit
Sum of profits on each incremental unit produced by a firm; i.e., profit ignoring fixed costs.
If third-degree price discrimination is feasible, what price should the firm charge each group of consumers?
pg 34 example
-the higher price will be charge to the people with the lower price elasticity!
What is monopolistic competition, and what are 2 key features?
Market in which firms can enter freely, each producing its
own brand or version of a differentiated product.