ECN 104 Chapter Notes - Chapter 10: Monopolistic Competition, Marginal Revenue, Economic Equilibrium

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22 Oct 2016
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A monopoly is an industry in which one firm is the sole producer or seller of a product or service for which no close substitutes exist: main characteristics of a monopoly. A monopoly is an industry in which a single firm is the sole producer or seller of a specific good or the sole supplier of a service. A monopoly"s product is unique in that there are no close substitutes. The monopolist controls the total quantity supplied and thus has considerable control over price; it is a price-maker. The monopolist confronts the usual downward-sloping product demand curve. It can change its product price by changing the quantity of the product it produces. The monopolist will use its power whenever it is advantageous to do so. A monopolist has no competitors because certain barriers keep potential competitors from entering the industry. Those barriers may be economic, technical, legal, or of some other type, but entry is totally blocked in monopoly.

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