Market Power
Market power is an economic advantage that allows a firm to act as a price-setter rather than a price-taker. It is characterized by a firm having sufficient bargaining power to set a high price without losing its entire customer base to competitors. This power typically arises when a firm faces limited competition, often due to producing a product with few close substitutes. Market power can be derived from various sources, including cost advantages or significant product differentiation, and can be exercised in both product and labor markets, such as when a single major employer in a town dictates wages.
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Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
CORE Econ
Ch.6 The firm and its employees - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.7 The firm and its customers - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Market Power
Pricing Above Marginal Cost Leads to Market Failure
External Effect (Externality)
Non-Existent Markets as a Cause of Market Failure
Activity: Analyzing Market Failures by Identifying Missing or Incomplete Markets and Contracts
A large manufacturing plant produces steel and, in the process, releases pollutants into the air. These pollutants cause respiratory problems for residents in a nearby town, leading to increased healthcare costs for them. The plant does not pay for these healthcare costs. Which statement best analyzes why this scenario represents a market failure?
Analyzing a Market Failure Scenario
Match each scenario with the primary cause of market failure it illustrates.
Explaining Market Inefficiency
The mere presence of a single firm with significant control over the market price is, in and of itself, a market failure.
Contrasting Mechanisms of Market Failure
When a firm's production process creates pollution that harms the local environment without the firm paying for the damages, this is a type of market failure caused by a negative ________.
Consider two scenarios. Scenario 1: A chemical factory saves money by dumping waste into a river, which pollutes the water for a downstream fishing village, harming their fish stocks. Scenario 2: A single company holds the patent for a life-saving drug and sells it for a price ten times higher than its production cost, making it unaffordable for some patients who need it. Which statement best evaluates the market failures in these scenarios?
Analysis of an Innovation Spillover
Evaluating a Policy Response to Market Failure
Consumption Externalities as a Source of Market Failure
Framework for Analyzing Market Failures
Market Failure from Pricing Above Marginal Cost in Differentiated Product Markets
Market Power
Sources of Employer Power in the Labour Market
Bargaining Power
Analyzing Economic Power in a Business Scenario
A large tech company is the only major employer in a small, isolated town. As a result, it can offer wages below the industry average. Separately, to meet a tight deadline, a manager tells their team they must work an upcoming weekend, stating that anyone who refuses will be fired. How can the two forms of economic power at play be best distinguished in this scenario?
Match each form of economic power with the scenario that best exemplifies it.
Distinguishing Forms of Economic Power
Identifying Economic Power in a Labor Scenario
A pharmaceutical company holding the exclusive patent for a life-saving medication exercises 'power over others' when it doubles the drug's price, because patients are compelled to purchase it to survive.
A technology firm is the sole provider of a specialized software essential for the operations of many small businesses. The firm decides to increase its annual subscription fee by 50%, knowing that its customers have no viable alternatives and must pay the higher price to continue operating. The firm is exercising the form of economic power known as _______________.
Evaluating the Impact of Economic Power in the Gig Economy
When an employer successfully compels an employee to perform an undesirable task by threatening termination, which of the following is the most crucial underlying economic condition that gives this threat its force?
Evaluating an Employer's Use of Economic Power
Power Over Others
Learn After
Monopsony
Bargaining Power in Input Purchasing as a Source of Economies of Scale
Difficulty in Measuring Market Power in Two-Sided Markets
Dominant Firm
Demand Elasticity Determines Price-Setting Power
Joan Robinson (1903–1983)
Factors that Increase a Firm's Market Power
Microeconomic Inefficiency from Market Power
Evidence of Rising Market Power and Markups Since the 1980s
Analysis of a Firm's Pricing Influence
A small, isolated town has only one large factory, which employs the vast majority of the local workforce. The factory management recently announced that it will lower wages for all its production line workers, confident that most employees will accept the new terms. Which of the following economic principles best explains the factory's ability to implement this wage change without losing its entire workforce?
Match each business scenario to the primary source of market power it illustrates.
Evaluating the Consequences of Price-Setting Ability
A firm that invests heavily in creating a unique brand identity and product features distinct from its rivals will likely face more pressure to lower its prices to match competitors.
Comparing Market Power in Different Scenarios
A business consultant is evaluating four different companies to determine which one possesses the greatest degree of market power. Based on the descriptions provided, which company is in the strongest position to profitably set its prices significantly above its production costs?
A company develops a revolutionary new production technique that significantly lowers its cost of manufacturing a product that is physically identical to its competitors' offerings. How does this development grant the company market power?
A pharmaceutical company has been the sole producer of a highly effective and widely used patented medication for the past 15 years, allowing it to set a high price and earn substantial profits. Which of the following events would most directly and significantly diminish this company's market power?
Consider two firms. Firm A operates in a market with numerous competitors, selling a standardized product with no significant features distinguishing it from others. Firm B operates in a market with fewer competitors and sells a product with unique, patented features and a strong brand reputation. Which of the following statements accurately analyzes the market power of these two firms?
Monopoly
Two Primary Sources of Market Power
Consequences of Market Power from Product Differentiation