ECO101H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Monopolistic Competition, Demand Curve, Price Fixing

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ECO101H1 Full Course Notes
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ECO101H1 Full Course Notes
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Auto manufacturers (north america: few firms (gm, chrysler, ford, face downward-sloping demand curves. Should gm raise price of its compact cars: mutual interdependence. If compete with one another, industry profits may fall to competitive level (zero economic profits) If form a successful cartel, industry profits may equal monopoly profits. Insights: most oligopolists compete with one another, cartels are illegal, cartels, if formed, may break down for incentive reasons (text: the conflict between cooperation and self-interest) Oligopolists may try to collude (form a cartel) rather than to compete with one another: forming a cartel ( price-fixing ) is illegal, economic analysis draws attention to incentives (which may cause a cartel to break down) Numerical example: purpose: what output would a profit-maximizing monopolist produce in special case where mc = Assume (for simplicity): mc = 0 = atc (example: town wells) Mr = mc = 0 => p = 60 q = 30 profit = 1800.

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