- •1.The role of Microeconomics
- •2. T he Subject Matter of Microeconomics
- •3. The use and limitation of Microeconomic theory
- •4. Economic methodology and microeconomic models
- •5. Equilibrium analysis
- •6. Positive and normative analysis
- •7. Demand Function(df): Individual df vs Market df
- •8. Change in Quantity Demanded, Change in Demand
- •9.Inferior, Normal and Superior Goods
- •10. Supply Function. Change in quantity supplied and Change in supply
- •11. Market equilibrium
- •12 Market Adjustment to Change: shifts of Demand and shift of Supply
- •Shifts of Demand
- •13. Changes in Both Supply and Demand
- •14. Cobweb theorem as an illustration of stable and unstable equilibrium
- •Unstable cobweb
- •Constant cobweb
- •15. Government regulation of a market
- •1. Price ceiling and Price floor
- •2. Impact of a tax on price and quantity
- •16. Price ceiling and Price floor
- •Impact of a tax on price and quantity
- •18. Demand elasticity. Price Elasticity Coefficient and Factors affecting price elasticity of demand
- •Table of price elasticity kinds of demand
- •19. Impact of demand elasticity on price and total revenue
- •20. Income elasticity of demand(yed)and Cross elasticity of demand
- •Categories of income elasticity:
- •21. The price elasticity of supply
- •22. Market adaptation to Demand and Supply changes in long-run and in short-run
- •24.Consumer Choice and Utility
- •25. Total Utility (tu) and Marginal Utility (mu)
- •26. Indifference curves.
- •28. The effects of changes in income and prices
- •29 Equimarginal Principle and Consumer equilibrium
- •30.Income Consumption Curve. Engel Curves
- •32. Income and Substitution Effects
- •The slutsky method
- •34. Production Function
- •35. Time and Production. Production in the Short-Run
- •36.Average, Marginal and Total Product. Law of diminishing returns
- •37. Producer’s behavior
- •38 Isoquant
- •39. Isocost
- •40. Cost minimization (Producer’s choice optimisation)
- •41.The treatment of costs in Accounting and Economic theory
- •Average costs. Marginal Cost
- •Long run average cost. Returns to Scale.
- •45Different market forms
- •48 The Competitive Firm and Industry Demand
- •49.Economic strategies of the firm in p-competitive m arket
- •50.Long run equilibrium
- •51.Definition of Monopoly Market. Causes of monopoly.
- •Patents and Other Forms of Intellectual Property
- •Control of an Input Resource
- •Capital-consuming technologies
- •Decreasing Costs
- •Government Grants of Monopoly
- •52.Monopoly Demand and Marginal Revenue
- •54. Monopoly Inefficiency
- •Negative consequences of Monopoly
- •55. "Natural" Monopoly
- •Government Ownership
- •56. Imperfect competition and Monopolistic competition
- •57. Profit Maximization in Monopolistic Competition
- •58. Oligopoly
- •59. Firms behavior in Oligopoly
- •60 Kinked Demand Model
- •61 Competitive factor markets
- •62 The Demand for Inputs
- •63 Supply of Inputs
- •64. Equilibrium in a Market for Inputs
- •Labour market
- •Land market
- •Capital market
- •65. Labor market: labor demand and supply of labor.
- •66.The Marginal productivity approach to demand for labor.
- •Equilibrium and disequilibrium on labor market.
- •68. Particularities of Land market. Differential rent. Marginal productivity of land.
- •69 Main characteristics of Asset market. Demand for capital. Interest rate.
- •70. Discounted value. Conceptions of Net present value (npv) and future present value (fv).
- •The role of Microeconomics
- •T he Subject Matter of Microeconomics
51.Definition of Monopoly Market. Causes of monopoly.
By definition, a monopoly is the only seller of a product for which there is no close substitute. It is an industry in which there is only one firm – or, conversely, a firm that has the whole industry to itself.
In an economy populated by alert profit-seekers, it seems that any profitable monopoly would quickly attract competitors. For a monopoly to be stable, there must be some "barrier to entry." Thus, we ask what might "cause" a monopoly, what the "barrier to entry" might be.
Most texts give five causes of monopoly:
patents and other forms of intellectual property
control of an input resource
capital-consuming technologies
decreasing cost
government
Patents and Other Forms of Intellectual Property
Patent law is designed to increase the incentive to invent new methods of production and new goods. The inventor is granted a temporary monopoly on the use of the invention. The idea is that the patent makes the invention more profitable, during the term of the patent, and that these profits encourage inventors and so increase the rate of technical progress.
For example, the Polaroid company has owned the basic patents on instant cameras. When the Kodak company produced instant cameras in competition with Polaroid, a court found that this violated Polaroid's patent rights, and Kodak had to cease and desist and pay a penalty to Polaroid.
Other forms of "intellectual property" include copyrights on books and works of art and such, trade-marks, and trade secrets. Copyrights and trade-marks probably do not create monopolies in and of themselves. There may be close substitutes for copyrighted books, and close or even perfect substitutes can be offered for trade-marked goods, provided they do not falsify the trade-mark. However, it is possible that trade secrets might create monopolies. The formula for Coca-Cola, for example, is a trade secret. While Coca-Cola probably is not a monopoly, this is a matter of degree – Coca-Cola is a distinctive product. Whether other colas are close substitutes or not we leave to the judgment of the reader.
Control of an Input Resource
Products which require a natural-resource input may be monopolized if one supplier can get control of all known supplies of the natural resource. For example, at one time all known supplies of nickel were controlled by a single company. Aluminum ore, too, was at one time controlled by a single supplier.
Capital-consuming technologies
Nowadays many goods are produced on the base of complicated and fun-consuming technologies. Machine-building industries, industrial equipment, automobile, marine vehicles imply large factories with many subsidiaries. Such a large investment are not up to small or medium producers.
Decreasing Costs
M onopolies can come about because there are decreasing costs (increasing returns to scale) in the long run. In such a case, the long run average cost slopes downward, as shown in the picture. In such a case, the largest producer can undersell the rest, and still make a bigger profit. Therefore, in an industry in which there are increasing returns to scale, we would not be surprised to find a monopoly, in the absence of any other causes.
