ECON 2010 Lecture 26: Monopoly 2

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ECON 2010 Full Course Notes
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ECON 2010 Full Course Notes
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Missing out on surplus, value, or anything really is considered dead weight loss. Also re(cid:272)all that q* is (cid:449)here mc=mr it"s (cid:448)ery i(cid:373)porta(cid:374)t. Marginal revenue is twice as steep as the demand curve. Marginal revenue is always below the demand curve. Therefore, q* is always going to be lower than the most efficient quantity for monopolies. Consumer surplus is [(willingness to pay)-(price)] * q. Producer surplus is [(price)-(willingness to sell)-)] * q. In monopolies, consumers lose more surplus than producers gain. (producer surplus will therefore always increase in a monopoly) 1= consumer surplus 2= producer surplus 3= dead weight loss, producer surplus is significantly bigger than consumer surplus. Price discrimination is the act of selling the same good to consumers for different prices. Not examples: costco sells hot dogs for . 50. Perfect price discrimination is when each consumer is charged their exact willingness to pay (which is impossible). Perfect price discrimination is as equally efficient as perfect competition.

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