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Theory of Natural Monopoly and Its Control

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Note: This week's lectures will be extremely theoretical. ... 2. Example: discounted air fares. 3. Competitive concessions and. the Robinson-Patman Act. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Theory of Natural Monopoly and Its Control


1
Theory of Natural Monopoly and Its Control
  • I. What is natural monopoly?
  • II. The pricing problem rate levels
  • A. P MC B. P ATC
  • Next topic The economics of multiple prices
  • Note This weeks lectures will be extremely
    theoretical. The political and administrative
    side are well covered by Greer, chapter 14. We
    need to know BOTH views.

2
Theory of Natural Monopoly and its Control
  • I. What is natural monopoly?
  • A. Long-run average cost that decreases
  • as the output rate increases.
  • B. Temporary v. permanent
  • C. Subadditivity
  • 1. Economies of scale
  • 2. Economies of scope
  • 3. Economies of vertical integration
  • D. The sustainability problem

3
Theory of Natural Monopoly
  • II. The pricing problem rate levels
  • A. P MC
  • 1. Implications for efficiency
  • 2. What to do with the loss?
  • a. Is subsidy warranted?
  • b. Incentive problem
  • c. Should nonusers (taxpayers) pay?

4
Natural Monopoly II. Rate level
  • B. TR - TC 0 Price ATC
  • 1. Relation to the standard regulatory model
  • 2. Welfare loss
  • 3. Incentive problems, again
  • C. The general regulatory framework
  • 1 Profit limitation, which implies
  • 2. Revenue adequacy, which implies
  • 3. Cost recovery gt TR VC sK.
  • C. Nonlinear pricing
  • 1. Relation of quantity and expenditure
  • 2. Two-part tariff
  • 3. Declining-block tariff

5
The Economics of Multiple Prices
  • Prologue Economics and Politics of Regulation.
  • I. Price discrimination, revisited.
  • A. Price discrimination without regulation.
  • 1. Example AIDS drugs for southern Africa
  • 2. Example discounted air fares.
  • 3. Competitive concessions and
  • the Robinson-Patman Act.
  • 4. Moral discrimination v. restriction

6
Economics of Multiple Prices
  • I. B. But is it discrimination? Cost element.
  • C. Third degree discrimination
  • 1. Requirements
  • a. Pricing power
  • b. Separate markets
  • c. Different elasticities
  • 2. Result MR1 MR2 MC

7
Economics of Multiple Prices
  • I. Price discrimination, revisited
  • D. Prices and elasticity
  • 1. Under profit maximization
  • 2. Under Ramsey pricing
  • E. Some regulatory vocabulary
  • 1. Cost of service vs. value of service
  • 2. FDC vs. marginal cost
  • 3. Value-of-service pricing

8
Economics of Multiple Prices
  • I. Price discrimination, revisited
  • F. Output-related discrimination
  • G. When regulation requires discrimination.
  • 1. Cross-subsidization of favored users.
  • 2. Uniform prices when costs arent equal
  • 3. A way to pay those fixed costs?

9
Economics of Multiple Prices
  • II. Cross-subsidization
  • A. Strict definition
  • B. Cross-subsidization in the unregulated
    context
  • 1. Pricing of related products.
  • 2. A weapon of predation?

10
Economics of Multiple Prices
  • II. Cross-subsidization
  • C. Why regulation may require it
  • 1. Fairness
  • 2 Entitlement
  • 3. Relation to political power
  • D. The efficiency problem
  • E. ALL cross-subsidization is price
    discrimination, but .....

11
Economics of Multiple Prices
  • III. Peak-load pricing
  • A. The basic peak-load problem
  • B. System load and marginal cost.
  • C. Who pays for peak capacity?
  • D. Is marginal-cost pricing feasible?
  • IV. Discrimination vs. peak pricing--its
    sometimes hard to tell the difference.
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