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Encyclopedia > Monopoly profit

In economics, a firm is said to reap monopoly profits when a lack of viable market competition allows it to set its prices above the equilibrium price for a good or service without losing profits to competitors. Monopoly profit is a type of economic profit, that is, it is a profit greater than the normal profit that is typical in a perfectly competitive industry.


In a perfectly competitive market, firms are said to be price takers: since a customer can buy widgets from one producer as easily as another, any widget producer on the market faces a horizontal demand curve at the equilibrium price: if the firm tries to sell widgets above the equilibrium price, customers will simply buy their widgets elsewhere and the firm will lose all of their business. (In actual markets, of course, there is never a situation where exactly comparable goods are available just as easily from one firm as from another — the theory of perfect competition is a useful idealized model rather than a naturalistic description.)


By contrast, lack of competition in a market creates a downward sloping demand curve for a monopolist or oligopolist : although they will lose some business by raising prices, they will not lose it all, and it may be more profitable in most situations to sell at a higher price. This does not mean that monopolists are not price takers. It only says that they have the option of being either a "price taker" (at a level of output of their own choosing), or a "quantity taker" (at a price of their own choosing). They can set their own price and accept a level of ouput determined by the market, or they can set their output quantity and accept the price determined by the market. They cannot set both price and output.


A firm with monopoly power in setting prices will typically set price at the profit maximizing level. The most profitable price that they can set is where the optimum output level (where marginal cost (MC) equals marginal revenue (MR) as seen on the diagram below) meets the demand curve. Under normal market conditions for a monopolist, this price will be higher than the equilibrium price (which is the price at which marginal cost for the producer equals marginal benefit for the consumer). In the chart below the shaded area represents the profits of the monopolist. The lower half represents the normal profits that would go to a competitive firm (ignoring output losses). The upper half represent the additional economic profit going to the monopolist.


diagram showing how a monopoly prices


As long as the price elasticity of demand (in absolute value) for most customers is less than one, it is very advantageous to increase the price: the seller gets more money for less goods. With an increase of the price the price elasticity tends to rise, and in the optimum mentioned above it will for most customers be above one.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Monopoly, by George J. Stigler: The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics: Library of Economics and Liberty (2376 words)
Monopolies that exist independent of government support are likely to be due to smallness of markets (the only druggist in town) or to rest upon temporary leadership in innovation (the Aluminum Company of America until World War II).
It takes years before a monopoly practice is identified, and more years to reach a decision; the antitrust case that led to the breakup of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company began in 1974 and was still under judicial administration in 1991.
The main kind of monopoly that is both persistent and not caused by the government is what economists call a "natural" monopoly.
Monopoly - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2969 words)
Monopolies are characterized by a lack of economic competition for the good or service that they provide and a lack of viable substitute goods.
Monopolies are often distinguished based on the circumstances under which they arise; the broadest distinction is between monopolies that are the result of government intervention and those that arise without it e.g.
A local monopoly is a monopoly of a market in a particular area, usually a town or even a smaller locality: the term is used to differentiate a monopoly that is geographically limited within a country, as the default assumption is that a monopoly covers the entire industry in a given country.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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