price-maker - monopoly offers only 1 source for a given good
- firms in competitive market take the price of the market
- can't charge higher than market price or else will lose all profit
- monopoly forms the entire supply curve in forming a market equilibrium
- will still maximize profits where MR = MC
- monopoly promotes barriers to entry
- no longer a monopoly if free entry was possible
- average revenue = P(q)
- P(q) given by market demand
- no other competition to decide price
- marginal revenue = d[P(q)q]/dq
equilibrium price
- find quantity that needs to be produced from MR=MC
- plug that quantity into the market demand function to find market price
- multiplant production - monopoly has different plants w/ different production
- use total marginal product to find total quantity that needs to be produced
- use the price (not market price) that corresponds to total quantity and the marginal cost functions for each individual plant to find how much each will produce
- demand
- marginal revenue
- marginal cost
- p* = market price
- q = quantity at the intersection of marginal revenue and cost
- MR = P + P(1/Edemand)
- more elastic >> price mark-up decreases (p*-p decreases)
monopolistic competition - products still distinct but possibly substitutes
- ie. soda brands
- product differentiation - firms try to differentiate their product from that of other firms
- otherwise, each firm bound by prices set by other firms
- each firm now faces a different demand curve