Chapter 9: Problem 15
How is the demand curve perceived by a perfectly competitive firm different from the demand curve perceived by a monopolist?
Chapter 9: Problem 15
How is the demand curve perceived by a perfectly competitive firm different from the demand curve perceived by a monopolist?
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For many years, the Justice Department has tried to break up large firms like IBM, Microsoft, and most recently Google, on the grounds that their large market share made them essentially monopolies. In a global market, where U.S. firms compete with firms from other countries, would this policy make the same sense as it might in a purely domestic context?
Imagine that you are managing a small firm and thinking about entering the market of a monopolist. The monopolist is currently charging a high price, and you have calculated that you can make a nice profit charging \(10 \%\) less than the monopolist. Before you go ahead and challenge the monopolist, what possibility should you consider for how the monopolist might react?
How can a monopolist identify the profit-maximizing level of output if it knows its marginal revenue and marginal costs?
How does the demand curve perceived by a monopolist compare with the market demand curve?
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