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Micro Economics




                    Notes



                                     Notes     Sources of Monopoly
                                     1.   Legal Restrictions:  Some public sector services are statutory monopolies, which
                                          means their position is protected by law.

                                          A monopoly position might also be protected by a patent which prevents other fi rms
                                          from producing an identical good during the life of the patent. However, similar
                                          products can often be produced and it is easy to exaggerate the protection afforded
                                          by patents.
                                     2.   Capital Costs:  Certain businesses, such as international airlines and chemical
                                          companies, have relatively high set-up costs. In such cases the minimum effi cient
                                          scale of production might be very high indeed and this creates a formidable barrier
                                          to entry.
                                     3.   Natural Factor Endowments: Sometimes firms, within a particular country, between

                                          them control a major proportion of the world output of a commodity: nitrates from
                                          Chile, coffee from Brazil and gold from South Africa are cases in point. A particular
                                          country has a monopoly in the supply of a particular commodity due to natural
                                          factor endowments and it is impossible to obtain supply of the commodity from any
                                          other source.

                                     4.   Tariffs and Quotas:  It can happen that a  firm has a dominant position in its
                                          home country, but faces competition internationally. A tariff raises the price of
                                          goods imported into the domestic economy and a quota restricts the volume that
                                          can be imported. They, therefore, protect domestic industry from international
                                          competition.

                                   11.2 Types of Monopoly

                                   Economists differentiate between different types of monopolies based on why the monopoly
                                   exists, such as where the barrier to entry for new companies comes from, which could be high
                                   entry costs or legal restrictions.

                                   1.  Naturalmonopoly: A natural monopoly occurs when the type of industry makes it fi nancially
                                       impractical, if not impossible, for multiple companies to engage in the business.

                                               Example: If you had multiple companies attempting to offer sewage services, that

                                       would require multiply sewer lines running to homes which is financially – and likely
                                       spatially – impossible. This makes the sewage industry a natural monopoly.
                                   2.  Private monopoly: The monopoly  firm owned and operated by private individuals is

                                       called the private monopoly. Their main motive is to make profi t.
                                   3.  Absolute monopoly: It is a type of monopoly, where a single seller controls the entire supply
                                       of market without facing competition. It is also known as pure monopoly. His product
                                       does not have even any remote substitute also.
                                   4.  Imperfect monopoly: It is a type of monopoly in which a single seller controls the entire
                                       supply of the market which does not have a close substitute. But there might be remote
                                       substitute for the product available in the market.
                                   5.  Geographic monopoly: Geographic monopolies occur when there is only one company that
                                       offers a particular good or service in an area.





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