Micro-Chapter 12

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A monopolist does not have a supply curve because:

-it does not equate price with marginal cost -there is no single, unique price associated with each level of output

Why might a monopolist accept a less-than-maximum per-unit profit?

Additional sales more than compensate for the lower profit per unit.

How can imperfect competitors influence price?

By changing the quantity they produce

What is the shape of the product demand curve for a pure monopolist?

Downward sloping

Which are types of barriers to entry?

Economic Technological Legal

Which of the following is more likely for a pure monopolist than for a pure competitor?

Economic profit

If producing is preferable to shutting down, a profit-seeking monopolist will produce up to the output at which _______.

MR = MC

Which of the following exists when a single firm is the sole producer of a product for which there are no close substitutes?

Pure monopoly

How common are examples of pure monopoly?

Rare

What leads to most patentable inventions and products?

Research and development

Which of the following explains the reasons for short-run losses and long-run bankruptcy when a socially optimal price is forced on a monopoly

The regulated price may be so low that average total costs are not covered.

When demand is elastic and marginal revenue is positive, total revenue must be

increasing.

In a pure monopoly, the demand curve for the firm is also the demand curve for the ______

industry

A natural monopoly's economies of scale refers to one firm's ability to achieve the lowest long-run average total cost, also known as

the minimum efficient scale at a high level of output.

How is economic profit determined?

By multiplying per-unit profit by the total quantity produced

What may occur when only a single firm can achieve the economies of scale necessary to compete in an industry?

Natural monopoly

What is the term used to describe a situation where a single firm has the bulk of sales in a specific market?

Near-monopoly

Which of the following are potential solutions to the economic losses incurred by a regulated monopoly caused by socially optimal pricing?

Price discrimination Public subsidies

A firm's manager is given the following information: To sell 4 units of output, a price of $132 must be charged; this level of output reflects marginal revenue of $102 and marginal costs of $60. If the firm wants to sell 5 units of output, a price of $122 must be charged; this reflects marginal revenue of $82 and marginal costs of $70. To sell 6 units of output, a price of $112 must be charged; at this level of output, marginal revenue will be $62 and marginal costs $80. What should the manager do?

Produce 5 units of output and charge $122.

Why does an inventor need to have her or his invention protected from rivals?

Rivals will use the invention without having shared in the effort and expense of developing it.

What is the term used to refer to a product's ability to satisfy a large number of consumers at the same time?

Simultaneous consumption

Natural gas and electricity are both examples of which type of monopoly?

Standardized

What did American Express do when it prevented the merchants who signed up to accept American Express credit cards from promoting rival cards to their customers?

The company created a barrier to trade.

Which of the following contribute to the complexities involved in fair-return pricing?

The difficulty of determining what the fair-return price should be Large rate-setting bureaucracies Rate decisions that require extensive public input through letters and hearings

Which of the following are reasons that a monopolist is considered a price maker?

The monopolist exerts control over the price. The monopolist controls the total quantity supplied.

Which of the following explains why a pure monopolist is able to maintain an economic profit in the long run?

There are no new entrants to increase supply, drive down price, and eliminate profit.

When faced with continuing losses, what do the owners of a monopoly do?

They move their resources to alternative industries in the long run.

Which of the following are reasons for a monopoly's loss of economic profit?

Upward-shifting cost curves caused by escalating resource prices Change in tastes reducing demand

Which of the following factors explains the trend of federal, state, and local governments to abandon price regulation if the possibility of competition looks promising?

Various forms of X-inefficiency

Hiring incompetent relatives and poor supervision of workers can result in ______.

X-inefficiency

When a firm produces a specific output level at a higher cost than the necessary cost for that level of output, it is called ______.

X-inefficiency

Which of the following does the monopolist not have?

a supply curve

Monopoly yields neither productive nor _____ efficiency.

allocative

At the profit-maximizing (loss-minimizing) output for a monopoly, if average revenue is less than average total costs, then the monopoly is experiencing

an economic loss

Monopoly is a legitimate concern because monopolists charge prices that are higher than marginal costs, which results in _______.

an underallocation of resources to the monopolized product

The monopolist's level of output is not at the minimum point of ______, meaning it will not be productively efficient.

average total cost

One option for dealing with an unsustainable monopoly due to emerging new technology is to _____ the monopoly and allow ______ to take place

ignore; creative destruction

In many large cities, the number of taxicabs allowed to operate is limited by the local government through the ______.

issuing of licenses

When marginal revenue is negative, what is happening to total revenue?

it is diminishing

The profit-maximizing monopolist avoids the inelastic segment of its demand curve because

it would mean lowering price and increasing output, which leads to less total revenue

The profit-maximizing monopolist avoids the inelastic segment of its demand curve because

it would mean lowering price and increasing output, which leads to less total revenue.

Government creates ______ barriers to entry.

legal

Patents, economies of scale, and resource ownership are all assumptions of the pure ______ model.

monopoly

The main characteristics of a pure _____ are a single seller, no close substitutes, a price maker, blocked entry, and non-price competition.

monopoly

Which form of industry is most likely to have the highest barriers to entry?

monopoly

______ power achieved through patents may be self-sustaining because the profit from one patent can finance the research required to develop new patentable products.

monopoly

When the market demand curve crosses the long-run average total cost curve where average total costs are declining, the firm is called a(n)

natural monopoly

A ______ -monopoly occurs when a single firm has the bulk of sales in a specific market.

near

In the long run, a monopolist must obtain, at a minimum, a(n) ______ profit to prevent going out of business.

normal

In the long run, only ______ for a pure competitor are possible, whereas a monopoly earns ______.

normal profits; economic profits

_____ utilities are government owned or regulated.

public

In a pure monopoly, marginal revenue is less than price for every unit of output except which one?

the first

The firm and ______ are synonymous in pure monopoly.

the industry

Comparing total revenue and total cost at each possible level of production and choosing the output with the greatest possible difference is another way to determine:

the profit-maximizing output

The monopolist seeks maximum _____ profit, not maximum unit profit.

total

The profit-maximizing level of output can be determined by comparing ______

total revenue and total cost at each possible level of production and choosing the output with the greatest positive difference

An excess of price over marginal cost is the market's way of signaling the need for more production of a good.

true

The monopolist has a pricing policy; the competitive producer does no

true

The world's nations have agreed on a uniform patent length of how many years?

20

Which of the following describes what "no close substitutes" means as it relates to consumers and a pure monopoly?

A consumer must either buy the monopolized product or do without it entirely.

Which of the following can cause X-inefficiency?

Avoiding business risk Maintaining a poorly motivated work force Hiring incompetent relatives

For the monopolist, less total revenue caused by a lower price and greater output is the reason for which of the following?

Avoiding the inelastic segment of the industry's demand curve.

Which of the following are characteristics of public utilities?

Monopolies or near monopolies Government owned or regulated

Which of the following describes why marginal revenue is less than price for monopolists?

Because the lower price of the extra unit of output also applies to all prior units of output

Which of the following is a reason for a monopoly's loss of economic profit?

Changes in tastes that reduce demand for a product

Which of the following are forms of price discrimination?

Charging each customer one price for the first unit and a lower price for subsequent units Charging different customers different prices Charging each customer the maximum price he or she is willing to pay

Which statement is true about costs for purely competitive and monopolistic producers?

Costs for purely competitive and monopolistic producers may not be the same.

What term is used to describe declining average total costs with added firm size?

Economies of scale

Why do costs differ between a purely competitive firm and a pure monopoly?

Economies of scale A factor called "X-inefficiency"

Which of the following steps are necessary to determine the profit-maximizing level of output, profit-maximizing price, and economic profit in pure monopoly?

Employ the profit-maximizing rule of MR=MC. Identify the profit-maximizing price and output by finding the price/output combination at MR=MC.

Which of the following two terms are synonymous in a pure monopoly?

Firm and industry

How does a monopoly generally transfer income?

From consumers to the owners of the monopoly

Which of the following are legal barriers to entry?

Government licensing Patents

Efficiency loss is also known as ______ loss.

deadweight

A natural monopoly occurs when the market demand curve crosses the long-run average total cost (ATC) curve where average total costs are still ______.

declining

Which of the following are examples of geographic monopolies?

A small town served by one airline A small town with one railroad A small town with one restaurant

What is the term for factors that prohibit firms from entering an industry?

Barriers to entry

Which of the following are reasons monopoly is not widespread in the United States?

Barriers to entry are seldom completely successful. Patents eventually expire.

Which of the following are the main characteristics of a pure monopoly?

Blocked entry for other firms Unavailability of close substitutes for its products Control over the price Presence of a single seller

How does a monopolist change the price of its product?

By changing the quantity of the product it produces.

With a fixed downward-sloping demand curve, how can a monopolist increase sales?

By charging a lower price

In general, how do economists think that the government should address monopolies?

By judging them on a case-by-case basis

Which of the following are examples of X-inefficiencies that may be found in regulated firms?

Higher-than-competitive wages Nicer-than-typical office buildings More managers and staff than necessary

Which type of competitors can influence price through their own output decisions?

Imperfect

Which of the following are entry barriers created by monopolists?

Increased advertising Price reductions

When marginal revenue is negative, what is happening to total revenue?

It is diminishing.

What is true of total revenue when marginal revenue is positive?

It is increasing.

Which of the following have helped firms achieve economies of scale?

Learning by doing Simultaneous consumption Specialized inputs

How do economies of scale affect long-run average total costs for a firm?

Long-run average total costs decline over a wide range of output.

Which of the following is the best example of simultaneous consumption?

Microsoft produces a new edition of Windows once, and millions of consumers use it.

Which of the following can be a cause of extensive economies of scale?

Modern technology

Which of the following competitors are imperfect?

Monopolistic competitors Pure monopolists Oligopolists

Which of the following are conditions necessary for price discrimination?

Monopoly power No resale Market segregation

Which of the following lead to declines in long-run average total costs?

Network effects Greater use of specialized inputs Spreading of product development costs

Which of the following may make a pure monopoly unsustainable over the long-run?

New technology

Which characteristic of pure monopoly requires a consumer to buy the monopolized product or do without it entirely?

No close substitutes

Which of the following are assumptions made in the model of pure monopoly?

No unit of government regulates the firm. Patents, economies of scale, and resource ownership secure the firm's monopoly. The firm is a single-price monopolist and charges the same price for all units of output.

If the objective of government is to achieve allocative efficiency, what kind of price should government establish for the monopolist?

One that is equal to its marginal cost.

Which of the following is considered a barrier to entry into an industry?

Ownership of essential property

What are the two legal barriers to entry created by the government?

Patents Licenses

Which of the following add nothing to the firm's output, but increase the firm's costs?

Rent-seeking expenditures

If a firm is found guilty of achieving a monopoly through anticompetitive actions, then which of the following may occur?

The firm may be expressly prohibited from engaging in certain business activities. The firm may be broken into two or more competing firms.

Why are efforts to enter such industries as commercial aircraft or household laundry equipment so rare?

The industries require economies of scale to be profitable, which is expensive and risky to establish.

Which statement about demand curves in a pure monopoly is true?

The monopolist's demand curve is also the industry demand curve.

Which of the following reasons explains why a professional sports team can be considered a monopoly?

They are the sole suppliers of specific services in a large geographic area.

What is the effect on total profit when a firm charges a higher price to groups with inelastic demand and a lower price to groups with elastic demand instead of charging a everyone a single monopoly price?

Total profit increases.

How much will a profit-seeking monopolist produce if producing is preferable to shutting down?

Up to the output at which marginal revenue equals marginal cost

Dentsply, a dominant American maker of false teeth, unlawfully prevented independent distributors of false teeth from carrying competing brands. This action is an example of _______.

a created entry barrier

A monopolist will never choose a price-quantity combination where price reductions cause:

a decrease in total revenue

A monopolist will not seek the highest price possible because

a monopolist seeks maximum profit, not maximum price.

The exclusive right of an inventor to use, or to allow another to use, her or his invention is called:

a patent

A natural monopolist may obtain substantial economic profit by setting a price ______.

above average total cost (ATC)

Two legal _____ to entry are patents and licenses.

barriers

As an example of ______, the Federal Communications Commission licenses only so many radio and television stations in each geographic area

barriers to entry

The more profitable a firm, the greater its monopoly power.

cannot be determined

______ of essential property is a barrier to entry into an industry.

control

In price discrimination, the price differences are not justified by ______ differences.

cost

In a monopoly, the average total cost of output declines as more customers are added because marginal ______.

costs are low with simultaneous consumption.

Marginal revenue is less than price at every unit of output because the monopolist

could have sold these prior units at a higher price if it had not produced and sold the extra output.

Economies of scale refer to ______ average total costs with added firm size.

declining

A pure monopolist must face a downward-sloping product _____ curve.

demand

The key difference between a pure monopolist and a purely competitive seller lies on the ______ side of the market.

demand

Long-distance phone calls, natural gas distribution, wireless communication, and cable television are all examples of

deregulated natural monopolies

Monopolists that have ______ products engage mainly in advertising their products' attributes, while those that have ______ products engage primarily in public relations advertising.

differentiated; standardized

New firms have difficulty achieving the large size necessary to acquire economies of scale due to the ______.

difficulty of securing large amounts of financing

Price makers are firms with:

downward-sloping demand curves

A firm positions itself in the best profit-maximizing (or loss-minimizing) level of production if the amount of output reflects the point at which the last unit's marginal revenue is equal to its marginal cost because

each unit of output after the MR = MC amount will earn less revenue than its costs. each unit of output prior to MR = MC earns more revenue for the firm than its costs.

A firm positions itself in the best profit-maximizing (or loss-minimizing) level of production if the amount of output reflects the point at which the last unit's marginal revenue is equal to its marginal cost because

each unit of output prior to MR = MC earns more revenue for the firm than its costs. each unit of output after the MR = MC amount will earn less revenue than its costs.

Total ______ is found by multiplying per-unit profit by the profit-maximizing output.

economic profit

A firm's long-run average total costs may decline over a wide range of output due to ______ of scale.

economies

Modern technology can be a cause of extensive ______.

economies of scale

The demand curve intersects the natural monopolist's long-run average total cost curve at a point where long-run average total costs are still falling, due to ______.

economies of scale

What is another name for deadweight loss?

efficiency loss

When productive efficiency and allocative efficiency are not achieved in a market, it is called a(n) ______.

efficiency loss

The demand curve of the purely competitive seller is perfectly _____, whereas the demand curve of the monopolist is not.

elastic

The monopolist wants a price-quantity combination to fall in the _____ section of its demand curve, where a lower price means _____ total revenue.

elastic; greater

Production occurs up to that level of output at which price ______ marginal cost, resulting in allocative efficiency under pure competition.

equals

With a natural monopoly the demand curve intersects the long-run average total cost curve where the long-run average total cost curve is still _____ .

falling, declining, decreasing, or lower

True or false: A firm is producing 24 units of output. At the 24th unit of output, marginal revenue is $5, and marginal cost is $4; at the 25th unit of output, marginal revenue is $4.50, and marginal cost is $4.50; at the 26th unit of output, marginal revenue is $4, and marginal cost is $5. This firm made the correct choice by producing only 24 units of output and then stopping.

false

True or false: A monopolist will charge the highest price possible.

false

True or false: Economists agree that government should eliminate all monopolies.

false

True or false: For a pure monopolist, total revenue increases at an increasing rate.

false

True or false: Government licensing is not a barrier to entry.

false

True or false: It is more profitable for competitive producers to sell a smaller output at a higher price than it is for pure monopolists.

false

True or false: Price discrimination is always legal in the United States.

false

True or false: Price discrimination is not practiced very often in the US economy.

false

True or false: When a firm with low marginal costs and fixed development costs adds more customers, the average total cost of output increases.

false

a. Because they can control product price, monopolists can guarantee profitable production by simply charging the highest price consumers will pay.

false

b. The pure monopolist seeks the output that will yield the greatest per-unit profit.

false

______ create(s) legal barriers to entry.

government

Compared to a pure competitor, a monopolist finds it profitable to charge a ______ price and supply a ______ quantity.

higher;lower

______ competitors include pure monopolists, oligopolists, and monopolistic competitors.

imperfect

For a pure monopolist, total revenue ______.

increases at a diminishing rate

When demand is elastic and marginal revenue is positive, total revenue must be

increasing

When comparing the demand curve for a perfectly competitive firm to the demand curve of a monopolist, the monopolist's demand curve would be more ______.

inelastic

A firm can be expressly prohibited from engaging in certain business activities or can be broken into two or more competing firms when it

is found guilty of monopoly abuse.

The socially optimal price (P = MC) is socially optimal because:

it achieves allocative efficiency

The price-discriminating monopolist charges a higher price to customers who have ______ elastic demand and a lower price to customers who have ______ elastic demand.

less; more

When a monopolist charges a higher price than a purely competitive firm would, the monopolist essentially ______.

levies a "private tax" on consumers

With a fixed downward sloping demand curve, the pure monopolist can only increase sales by charging a ______ price.

lower

Monopolists use economies of scale to block the entry of new firms into an industry by ______.

lowering prices so that another firm cannot compete

Firms with downward-sloping product demand curves are called price ______.

makers

The change in total revenue associated with a one-unit change in output is called ______ revenue.

marginal

The socially optimal price is where a monopoly's price is equal to

marginal cost

In a pure monopoly, ______ is less than the price for every unit of output except the first.

marginal revenue

The main problem with imposing the socially optimal price (P = MC) on a monopoly is that the socially optimal price:

may be so low that the regulated monopoly can't break even

A(n) ______ is able to maintain an economic profit in the long run because there are no new entrants to increase supply, drive down price, and eliminate economic profit.

monopoly

Slashing prices is an example of an entry barrier created by a(n) ____.

monopoly

The highest barriers to entry can be found with pure _____. The lowest barriers to entry can be found with pure _____.

monopoly; competition

A ______ monopoly is subject to rate regulations.

natural

For which of the following market structures does government policy allow for expansion and only eventual regulation of prices and operations?

natural monopoly

First Data Corporation accounts for 80% of the market for money order transfers. This is an example of a ______-monopoly.

near

Because Intel provides 80% of the central microprocessors used in personal computers, it is a:

near-monopoly

Marginal revenue is ______ (positive/negative) when total revenue is diminishing.

negative

A ______ (one word) is the exclusive right of an inventor to use, or allow another to use, her or his invention.

patent

The pharmaceutical industry is an example of an industry that has achieved self-sustaining monopoly power through ______ on drugs.

patents

Which of the following is considered a barrier to entry protecting an inventor from its rivals?

patents

Fair return pricing is a result of the Supreme Court ruling that regulatory agencies must ______.

permit a "fair return" to utility owners

When marginal revenue is ______, total revenue is increasing.

positive

"No firm is completely sheltered from rivals; all firms compete for consumer dollars. Therefore, pure monopoly does not exist." A monopoly is more likely to exist if the cross price elasticity of demand is

positive and less than 1.

The strongest barriers to entry effectively block all ______.

potential competition

Drawing a vertical line from the profit-maximizing output on the horizontal axis to the demand curve represents the ______.

price

What is the term used to refer to charging different prices to different buyers of a specific product?

price descrimination

Market segregation must exist in order for a monopolist to ______.

price discriminate

A Russian aluminum producer selling aluminum for less in the United States than in Russia because demand in the United States is elastic, whereas demand in Russia is less elastic is an example of ______ in international trade.

price discrimination

A regulated monopoly is likely to suffer losses when ______.

price is set to marginal cost (P = MC) price is set to achieve the most efficient allocation of resources

Monopolists use economies of scale to block the entry of new firms into an industry by reducing ______ so that other firms cannot compete.

prices

In pure competition, ______ efficiency is achieved because free entry and exit forces firms to operate where average total cost is at a minimum.

productive

Monopoly yields neither ______ efficiency nor allocative efficiency.

productive

When _____ efficiency and allocative efficiency are not achieved in a market, it is known as an efficiency loss.

productive

An unregulated monopolist uses the marginal revenue equals marginal cost (MR = MC) rule to determine the ______.

profit-maximizing output and price

Monopolies that produce standardized products engage mainly in ______.

public relations advertising

Entry is totally blocked to competitors in a(n) ______.

pure monopoly

What has traditionally been used to control natural monopolies?

rate regulation

What is it called when a firm spends significant money to maintain a monopoly through government legislation?

rent-seeking expenditures

______ and development leads to most patentable inventions and products.

research

At output levels prior to MR=MC, marginal ______ is higher in comparison to marginal ______.

revenue; cost

Microsoft is a firm that benefits from ______ consumption.

simultaneous

The ______ price is where a monopoly's price is equal to marginal cost.

socially optimal

To guard against excessively high prices to consumers, the government ______.

specifies the price natural monopolies may charge

Monopolists that have ______ products engage mainly in public relations advertising.

standardized or homogeneous

A pure monopoly exists when a single firm is the sole producer of a product for which there are no close ___.

substitutes

One reason that fair return pricing is so complex is because regulatory commissions must set prices that are ______ costs to create fair returns; therefore, regulated monopolists have little incentive to minimize average total costs.

sufficiently greater than

What does a price that exceeds marginal cost indicate for a product sold by a monopolist firm?

that resources for the product are underallocated

What aspect of the market defines the crucial difference between a pure monopolist and a purely competitive seller?

the demand curve

In a purely competitive industry:

the demand curve for each individual firm is perfectly elastic, while that for the industry is downward-sloping

Marginal revenue is the change in ______ revenue associated with a single-unit change in output.

total

True or false: Price discrimination is common in international trade due in part to differences in demand elasticity.

true

With respect to resource allocation, the interests of the seller and of society coincide in a purely competitive market but conflict in a monopolized market.

true

Patents provide the inventor with a monopoly position for what length of time?

twenty years

How common are examples of less pure forms of monopoly?

very common


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