ECON1101 Chapter Notes - Chapter 15: Monopoly Profit, Natural Monopoly, Marginal Cost

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In this case, when production is divided among more firms, each firm produces less, and average total cost rises. In contrast, entering a market in which another firm has a natural monopoly is unattractive: the size of the market may be a determinant of whether an industry is a natural monopoly. Because a monopoly firm is the sole producer in its market, it faces the downward-sloping market demand curve. The output effect: more output is sold, so q is higher, which tends to increase total revenue. The marginal-(cid:396)e(cid:448)e(cid:374)ue (cid:272)u(cid:396)(cid:448)e sho(cid:449)s ho(cid:449) the fi(cid:396)(cid:373)"s (cid:396)e(cid:448)e(cid:374)ue (cid:272)ha(cid:374)ges (cid:449)he(cid:374) the (cid:395)ua(cid:374)tit(cid:455) increases by one unit. It then uses the demand curve to find the price that will induce consumers to buy that quantity: for a competitive firm: p = mr = mc, for a monopoly firm: p > mr = mc. When the patent runs out, new firms enter the market, making it more competitive.

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