230 likes | 322 Views
Announcements: Tuesday. Breakout sections: the DeBeers case Next week: the Dupont case Remember to take Quiz 1 on Oncourse. Announcements: Thursday mng. Pd question—no change Last part of Market failure, missed because of fire alarm Remember to take Quiz 1 on Oncourse
E N D
Announcements: Tuesday • Breakout sections: the DeBeers case • Next week: the Dupont case • Remember to take Quiz 1 on Oncourse
Announcements: Thursday mng. • Pd question—no change • Last part of Market failure, missed because of fire alarm • Remember to take Quiz 1 on Oncourse • Next week: the Dupont case
Announcements: Thursday evng. • PD question---no change • Remember to take Quiz 1 on Oncourse • Next week: the Dupont case
What you will learn today... • Why your company and the government care about market power • How the government controls market power
Market Power P P Demand Demand 5 Q Q A business with market power A business with no market power
Two ways to increase profit P P Demand Demand MC0 P1 MC0 P0 P0 MC1 Q0 Q0 Q Q Q1 Reduce costs Increase the price
Sources of Market Power • Unique products • Economies of scale • Network externalities • Anti-competitive strategies • Government entry barriers • ________________________ • ________________________ • ________________________ • ________________________ • ________________________
What’s Wrong with Market Power? 1. Customers pay prices above marginal cost, and buy less— “deadweight loss” 2. Low-cost firms are kept out of the market—bad for them and consumers both 3. Higher costs “the lazy monopolist” 4. Rent-seeking 1. _______________________________ 2. _______________________________ 3. ________________________________ 4._________________________________
Two Losses from Monopoly Price Monopoly profit Pmonop Deadweight loss Pcomp MC Demand Quantity Qmonop Qcomp
Sometimes monopoly may be unavoidable because costs are lowest if a single firm supplies the whole market. We call this a _____________________ Examples:________________________________________________________________________________________ natural monopoly electricity, telephone service, cable TV, water to homes
Natural Monopoly $/Q 18 The monopoly price is ___, marginal cost is ___, and P=AC requires a price of ___. 5 Demand 10 18 Deadweight loss ___________________ 10 9 AC 5 MC Q 800 900 500 P=MC subsidies Govt. ownership government failure ________ _______________
Rate of Return Regulation: P=AC • Find the value of the firm’s equity • Decide a fair rate of return on equity • Find the firm’s variable costs • Estimate an output price that gives the firm the fair rate of return on equity The rate of return is not guaranteed--only the price is, for a few years.
1. Did the sign-in sheet get around? 2. If you answered a question, bring up a notecard for me. MC Which area is deadweight loss? (a) B+C P (b) C (c) C+H A Pmon (d) C+D D E B (e) C+D+H+J C F H L G Write on a notecard: What does area A+B+C+G+H represent? Demand J K I Q Qmon
Antitrust Law Having a monopoly is legal: creating one without creating social value is not Sherman Act (1890): No price-fixing, dividing up markets, cartels Clayton Act (1914): Mergers, exclusive dealing, tying, bundling, low pricing are illegal if done to monopolize
Price fixing is illegal per se • Sotheby’s and Christie’s auctioneers (2001) • New York city school lunch suppliers (2001) • Oil rig workers (2001) (a private suit) • Those who are hurt by it can sue for treble damages
Mergers • Firms apply for permission to merge • The Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission ask: Will this merger substantially lessen competition? • Often firms must divest portions of their business
Bill Gates in 1994, on anti-trust law: "None of the people who run Microsoft's seven divisions are going to change what they do or think or forecast. Nothing. Nothing."
A Justice Dept. Attorney: "It was foolish and provocative. It was like saying, 'I'm going to break the law. Catch me if you can.' "
The Justice Department’s Accusations: • Bundling Internet Explorer with Windows and making it hard to use Netscape • Requiring computer makers who bought Windows for any of their machines to pay a royalty per machine whether they use Windows on it or not • Offering AOL to bundle AOL with Windows if AOL dropped Netscape
What Happened • Microsoft decided to fight, not settle the suit • Judge Jackson found Microsoft guilty • On appeal, the higher court said that Jackson’s remedy was inappropriate • Settlement proposal: MS will stop using exclusive contracts and will charge uniform prices