Pure Monopoly
50 questions available
Questions
Which of the following is identified as a main characteristic of a pure monopoly?
View answer and explanationWhat are factors that prohibit firms from entering an industry called?
View answer and explanationFor a pure monopolist, why is the marginal revenue from selling an additional unit of output less than the price of that unit?
View answer and explanationA profit-maximizing monopolist will never choose a price-quantity combination in which price reductions cause total revenue to decrease because:
View answer and explanationA pure monopolist determines its profit-maximizing output level by producing up to the point where:
View answer and explanationAccording to the provided data for a pure monopolist, if the firm produces 4 units of output, the price is 132 dollars and the average total cost is 100.00 dollars. What is the total economic profit?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary reason a pure monopolist does not have a supply curve?
View answer and explanationA common misconception about monopoly pricing is that a monopolist will charge the highest price possible. Why is this incorrect?
View answer and explanationCompared to a purely competitive industry with the same costs, a pure monopolist will typically produce:
View answer and explanationWhat does the term 'X-inefficiency' refer to in the context of monopoly?
View answer and explanationWhich of the following is a necessary condition for a firm to practice price discrimination successfully?
View answer and explanationIn the context of regulated monopoly, what is the 'socially optimal price'?
View answer and explanationWhat is the 'dilemma of regulation' concerning natural monopolies?
View answer and explanationGiven the provided data for a pure monopolist, what is the marginal revenue of the 6th unit of output if price is 112 dollars and total revenue is 672 dollars, while at 5 units the total revenue was 610 dollars?
View answer and explanationWhich statement best describes the efficiency outcome of a pure monopoly compared to a purely competitive market, assuming identical costs?
View answer and explanationWhat is meant by 'rent-seeking behavior' in the context of monopoly?
View answer and explanationWhich of the following is an example of price discrimination?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary motivation for a monopolist to engage in price discrimination?
View answer and explanationBased on the provided data, a monopolist finds that the marginal revenue of the 9th unit is 2 dollars and its marginal cost is 130 dollars. Should the firm produce the 9th unit?
View answer and explanationA 'natural monopoly' occurs when:
View answer and explanationAccording to the provided data for a monopolist, what is the marginal cost of the 4th unit of output if the total cost of producing 3 units is 340 dollars and the total cost of producing 4 units is 400 dollars?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary consequence of a monopolist producing an output level where P > MC?
View answer and explanationHow might technological advance, such as the development of courier delivery and e-mail, affect the market power of a monopoly like the U.S. Postal Service?
View answer and explanationIf a pure monopolist is producing 7 units of output, the price is 102 dollars, and the average total cost is 91.43 dollars. What is the firm's total economic profit or loss?
View answer and explanationWhat does the term 'simultaneous consumption' mean in the context of monopoly and economies of scale?
View answer and explanationA monopolist's demand curve is equivalent to:
View answer and explanationIf a regulated natural monopoly is forced to set a 'fair-return price', what level will the price be set at?
View answer and explanationAccording to the data table, what is the profit or loss for a monopolist producing 10 units of output at a price of 72 dollars, with an average total cost of 103.00 dollars?
View answer and explanationWhat is the general effect of a monopoly on income distribution?
View answer and explanationIf a monopolist's demand is weak and costs are high, such that the profit-maximizing price is below average total cost but above average variable cost, the firm should:
View answer and explanationWhich of the following describes a government policy option for dealing with a long-lasting, inefficient monopoly that was achieved through anticompetitive actions?
View answer and explanationAccording to the provided data, a profit-maximizing monopolist will produce 5 units of output. What price will it charge?
View answer and explanationWhat are 'network effects'?
View answer and explanationWhat is the total revenue for a pure monopolist selling 3 units of output at a price of 142 dollars per unit?
View answer and explanationIn what way can patents, which grant monopoly power, be considered self-sustaining?
View answer and explanationWhy does a pure monopolist's marginal revenue become negative when it operates in the inelastic portion of its demand curve?
View answer and explanationIf a monopolist finds that its marginal revenue is 82 dollars and its marginal cost is 70 dollars at the current output level, it should:
View answer and explanationThe 'deadweight loss' or 'efficiency loss' of a monopoly is represented by the:
View answer and explanationWhich of the following conditions would prevent a firm from engaging in price discrimination?
View answer and explanationWhat is the total loss for a monopolist producing at its loss-minimizing output Qm, where price is Pm, average total cost is A, and average variable cost is V?
View answer and explanationAccording to Figure 10.1, if a monopolist can produce 200 units at a per-unit cost of 10 dollars, what would be the total cost if the industry consisted of four firms each producing 50 units at a per-unit cost of 20 dollars?
View answer and explanationWhat is the patent length for inventions agreed upon by the world's nations?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary difference between product innovation and process innovation?
View answer and explanationIn the case of De Beers' historical control of the diamond market, what was a primary tactic used to maintain its monopoly power against independent producers?
View answer and explanationWhy might a monopolist facing the possibility of future competition keep its prices lower than the short-run profit-maximizing level?
View answer and explanationGiven the data for a pure monopolist, what is the change in total revenue (marginal revenue) when the firm moves from selling 7 units at 102 dollars to 8 units at 92 dollars?
View answer and explanationIf a monopolist is engaging in perfect price discrimination, it will charge each customer:
View answer and explanationIn the graphical model of a regulated monopoly, setting the price at the 'fair-return' level (P = ATC) results in:
View answer and explanationWhat general view do economists hold regarding the technological progressiveness of a pure monopolist?
View answer and explanationAccording to the data table, what is the profit-maximizing output level for the pure monopolist?
View answer and explanation