Transcript Week 7

ECON 101 Tutorial: Week 7
Shane Murphy
[email protected]
Office Hours: Monday 3:00-4:00 – LUMS C85
LUMS Maths and Stats Help (MASH)
Centre
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Outline
• Roll Call
• Problems
• Discussion
Chapter 14: Exercise 8
The Best Computer Company just
developed a new computer chip.
a) Draw a diagram that shows
consumer surplus, producer
surplus, and total surplus in
the market for this new chip.
b) What happens to these three
measures if the firm can
perfectly price discriminate?
What is the change of
deadweight loss? What transfer
occurs?
Chapter 14: Question for Review 9
Describe two problems that arise when regulators tell a natural
monopoly that it must set a price equal to marginal cost
When regulators tell a natural monopoly that it must set price
equal to marginal cost, two problems arise.
• The first is that, because a natural monopoly’s marginal cost
that is always less than its average cost, setting price equal
to marginal cost means that the price is less than average
cost, so the firm will lose money. The firm would then exit
the industry unless the government subsidized it. However,
getting revenue for such a subsidy would cause the
government to raise other taxes, increasing the deadweight
loss.
• The second problem of using costs to set price is that it gives
the monopoly no incentive to reduce costs.
Exercise 3
A monopoly sells a product with a total-cost curve
TC(Q) = 1200 + Q2/2. The market demand is given by
the function Q=300-P. Calculate the price and
quantity that maximize profits for this monopolist.
MC = ?
MR = ?
MR = MC => Q = ?
P = 300 – Q = ?
Discussion
We don’t want “perfect competition” (profits = 0) even if we do
want “free markets” (free entry for new firms and/or products into
the market). Perfect competition is not conducive to rapid growth.
The story:
• Growth is ultimately driven by innovation
• People will innovate if they have incentives to innovate
• The incentive to innovate comes from economic profits
• Profits only exist when the innovator or firm has some market
power
Innovators and/or firms need to charge a price greater than
marginal cost to earn profits, otherwise there will be no incentive
to innovate, and ultimately no growth. If you allow competitors to
copy innovations they will drive the price down to marginal cost,
eliminating profits and incentives for innovation.
We want free entry of new firms with market power, but not free
entry of imitators who produce perfect competition.
Discussion
But perfect competition does maximize the combined
consumer and producer surplus from a given product. So
there is a tension here. Perfect competition maximizes the
output of *existing* products, but minimizes the output from
*potential* products.
• Example: if we decided that we had all the types of goods
and services that we could ever want, then we’d want to
enforce perfect competition. We would nullify every
patent, and let competition take over to maximize the
output of those existing goods and services.
• This means that it is not obvious what the right policy is for
intellectual property rights and competition. It depends on
your long-run perspective.
– You can trade off long-run growth for a higher level of current
output by canceling intellectual property rights. Or you can
trade off current output for a higher long-run growth rate by
strictly enforcing property rights.
Discussion
• There is no *right* answer here, because it
depends on your time preferences.
• But extreme answers are probably unlikely to be
optimal for anyone.
– Strict perfect competition – allowing imitators to
ensure P=MC – isn’t good because it prevents us from
getting new products.
– Super strong market power – limiting each good to
being produced by a perpetual monopolist, say –
would shrink the availability of every existing product,
even if it makes the incentive to innovate huge.