Economics HL
Economics HL
4
Chapters
117
Notes
Unit 1 - Intro To Econ & Core Concepts
Unit 1 - Intro To Econ & Core Concepts
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Understanding Demand Insights Into Buyer Behavior
Understanding The Law Of Demand Why Price Impacts Purchase
Understanding The Demand Curve Price vs. Quantity
Understanding Non-Price Determinants Of Demand Shifts
Understanding Shifts Vs. Movements In The Demand Curve
Understanding The Definition Of Supply In Business
The Law Of Supply: Price, Production, & Profit Dynamics
Unlocking The Mysteries Of The Supply Curve
Understanding Non-Price Determinants of Supply Shifts
Understanding Movements & Shifts In The Supply Curve
Understanding Market Equilibrium: The Balance of Demand & Supply
Understanding Market Equilibrium Shifts A Deep Dive
Understanding The Invisible Hand: The Price Mechanism's Role
Unlocking Consumer Surplus The Secret Behind Pricing
Unlocking Consumer Choices: Delving into Behavioural Economics
Unlocking Choices The Power of Behavioral Economics
Business Goals Beyond Profit CSR, Market Share & Growth
Understanding Income Elasticity of Demand (YED)
Understanding Price Elasticity of Supply Key Determinants Over Time
PES Analysis: Primary Commodities Vs. Manufactured Products
Why Governments Intervene in Markets: Top Reasons Explained
Indirect Taxes Impact & Analysis for Consumers and Producers
Understanding Government Subsidies Benefits & Impact
Understanding Price Ceilings Impact & Implications
Understanding Price Floors Impact & Implications in Markets
Market Mechanisms Achieving Social Efficiency Or Failing
Understanding Externalities Causes & Consequences in Economics
Understanding Pigovian Taxes: The 'Polluter Pays Principle'
Understanding Public Goods: Characteristics & Examples
Adverse Selection The Hidden Challenge in Markets
Moral Hazard The Hidden Risks of Asymmetric Information
Addressing Asymmetric Information Government Vs. Private Responses
Unraveling Economic Profits From Basics To Market Structures
Understanding Structure-Conduct-Performance The Power Of Market Dynamics
Understanding Perfect Competition Decoding Market Dynamics
Unraveling Allocative Efficiency in Perfect Competition
Monopoly Market Dynamics Insights Into Power & Profits
Understanding Monopoly Firms Efficiency & Market Power
Understanding Entry Barriers: Types & Implications
Unlocking The Secrets Of Oligopoly Markets
Unlocking Monopolistic Competition Its Dynamics and Impact
Benefits Of Big Firms: Monopoly Power & Market Dominance
Tech Giants' Abuse Of Monopoly Power: A Deep Dive
Understanding Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)
Unlocking Income Elasticity Of Demand: What It Means For You
Comparing PES: Primary Commodities Vs. Manufactured Products
Unmasking Monopoly Firms: Impacts On Society
Unit 3 - Macroeconomics
Unit 3 - Macroeconomics
Unit 4 - The Global Economy
Unit 4 - The Global Economy
IB Resources
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Economics HL
Economics HL

Unit 2 - Microeconomics

Understanding Monopoly Firms Efficiency & Market Power

Word Count Emoji
684 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Key Concepts

  • Monopoly
  • Allocative efficiency
  • Technical efficiency
  • Marginal cost (MC)
  • Average revenue (AR)
  • Social surplus
  • Consumer and producer surplus
  • Lerner Index of Monopoly Power
  • Market power

Monopolies and efficiency

 Monopolies Are Allocatively Inefficient

Allocative efficiency is when goods and services are distributed optimally, meaning everyone gets exactly what they want. In a perfect world, the price we pay for a product would match the cost of producing one more unit of that product (marginal cost or MC). However, monopolies don't live in a perfect world.

 

Example: Let's say you're the only one in town selling unicorn frappuccinos. As a monopoly, you might charge $8 for each one (P), even though it only costs you $3 (MC) to make one more. This price exceeds the marginal cost, leading to allocative inefficiency.

 

 Monopolies Are Technically Inefficient

Unlike in a perfectly competitive market, monopolies aren't pressured to produce goods with the minimum average cost. It's like baking a cake and not worrying about using the cheapest ingredients because you're the only bakery around.

Perfect competition vs. monopoly

In a perfectly competitive market, the interaction of demand and supply leads to an equilibrium price and quantity. Monopolies, however, restrict output to raise prices, leading to less production and higher prices than in competitive markets.

 

Example: In the competitive market of teddy bears, the equilibrium price might be $10 with 1000 teddy bears sold. But if you held the teddy bear monopoly, you might only produce 700 teddy bears and sell each for $15, since there's no competition to stop you.

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IB Resources
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Economics HL
Economics HL

Unit 2 - Microeconomics

Understanding Monopoly Firms Efficiency & Market Power

Word Count Emoji
684 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Key Concepts

  • Monopoly
  • Allocative efficiency
  • Technical efficiency
  • Marginal cost (MC)
  • Average revenue (AR)
  • Social surplus
  • Consumer and producer surplus
  • Lerner Index of Monopoly Power
  • Market power

Monopolies and efficiency

 Monopolies Are Allocatively Inefficient

Allocative efficiency is when goods and services are distributed optimally, meaning everyone gets exactly what they want. In a perfect world, the price we pay for a product would match the cost of producing one more unit of that product (marginal cost or MC). However, monopolies don't live in a perfect world.

 

Example: Let's say you're the only one in town selling unicorn frappuccinos. As a monopoly, you might charge $8 for each one (P), even though it only costs you $3 (MC) to make one more. This price exceeds the marginal cost, leading to allocative inefficiency.

 

 Monopolies Are Technically Inefficient

Unlike in a perfectly competitive market, monopolies aren't pressured to produce goods with the minimum average cost. It's like baking a cake and not worrying about using the cheapest ingredients because you're the only bakery around.

Perfect competition vs. monopoly

In a perfectly competitive market, the interaction of demand and supply leads to an equilibrium price and quantity. Monopolies, however, restrict output to raise prices, leading to less production and higher prices than in competitive markets.

 

Example: In the competitive market of teddy bears, the equilibrium price might be $10 with 1000 teddy bears sold. But if you held the teddy bear monopoly, you might only produce 700 teddy bears and sell each for $15, since there's no competition to stop you.

Unlock the Full Content! File Is Locked Emoji

Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Economics HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟

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