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(T2 - Market Structure) Lecture notes EC109. Microeconomics (EC109)

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Notes provide an extra bank of knowledge on market structure topics. Providing an in-depth and well-written summary of the necessary components for the EC109 course at the University of Warwick. These are the lecture notes for the first year of Microeconomics. From a student who scored a high first (>75%) and received the Oliver Hart prize.

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EC 109: Microeconomics
Topic 5: Market Structure
Monopoly
- When discussing markets, we assumed firms were price takers
Market Power: ability to affect market price
Monopsony: single buyer in a market
Monopoly: single seller in a market
- There are very few examples of pure monopolies
 Armed services
 Air traffic control
- But this depends on how we define the market
 What counts as a substitute?
- There are many examples of near monopolies:
 Google
 Monsanto
 Wikipedia
 Luxottica
 Koenig and Bauer
Natural Monopoly: only large-scale producer can lower average costs enough so LRAC < Price
- This is typically in an industry with large fixed cots
 Power, water, telecoms
- But the largest and most valuable firms in the world do not typically look this way
 Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, Facebook do not have large fixed costs
Platform: brings together different parties (buyers and seller, advertisers and viewers, etc.)
- They experience strong network effects
Network effects: new users increase surplus for current users
- This makes it more attractive, and new users join
Lock-in: makes it hard to establish a new firm since users would need to jointly move

Incumbent Competitor
Incumbent 5,5 0 ,−2
Competitor −2 , 0 8,8
- Monopolists exist due to some form of barrier to entry
 Otherwise, profits would draw the attention of competitors
- Technical barriers include:
 Strong increasing returns to scale due to large fixed costs or network effects
 Access to specific raw materials (rare earth metals, oil)
 Tacit expertise ('learning-by-doing’)
- Legal barriers could be:
 Patents, copyrights, trademarks
 Government licenses
- Monopolists will work hard to create additional barriers to entry:
 Maintaining company secrecy

,  Buying unique resources
 Political lobbying
- May also lower durability of their product to reduce competition with future sales
- To find where they would price their product?
 To maximize revenue, they must produce where MR=0
o Slope of MR is 1/2 the slope of the demand curve for linear demand
 To maximize profits, they will produce at MR=MC
π ( p )=Q ( p ) p−c ( Q ( p ) ) −FC
π (Q )=Qp (Q )−c (Q )−FC
d π (Q) dp dc
= p (Q ) + Q − =0
dQ dQ dQ
MR=MC
- Average profit per unit is the difference price and AC
 For monopolists, this is positive
- If monopolists maximize profits, this leads to underproduction relative to social optimum
¿∗¿¿
 Social optimum is at Q where p ( Q )=c ' (Q):
o Marginal social benefit of extra Q is p ( Q )
o Marginal social cost of extra Q is c ' (Q)
- SO, deadweight loss is created




Perfect Competition
- Perfect competition usually assumes:
 Many small buyers and sellers
 Undifferentiated products (perfect substitutes)
 Perfect information about prices
 Equal access to resources and production technologies
- Hard to find many convincing real-world examples
 But value of theory is that it gives a benchmark case to evaluate effects of competition
- Main implications are that:
 Firms are price takers due to lack of differentiation
 Transaction occur at a single market price due to perfect information
 Free entry
- The slope of a demand function is affected by the elasticity of demand
 Elasticity of demand is affected by:

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