Chapter 24 Which of the following statements about monopoly is most accurate?

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subject Authors David A. Macpherson, James D. Gwartney, Richard L. Stroup, Russell S. Sobel

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Economics Chapter 24 BPrice-Searcher Markets with High Entry Barriers
MULTIPLE CHOICE
189. Licensing is a process in which a firm wanting to enter a market must
a.
require all potential customers to obtain government permission to purchase the product.
b.
notify the government within a certain period after it has entered the market.
c.
pay all overdue taxes before entering the market.
d.
obtain permission from the government to enter the market.
190. Patent laws that allow the inventor to maintain monopoly rights to an invention increase the price of
the product and
a.
increase the profitability of inventive activities, thereby speeding up technological
developments.
b.
increase the profitability of inventive activities, thereby slowing down technological
developments.
c.
decrease the profitability of inventive activities, thereby speeding up technological
developments.
d.
decrease the profitability of inventive activities, thereby slowing down technological
developments.
191. Which of the following is true for a firm that is a monopolist?
a.
the firm will make an economic profit in the short run.
b.
the firm will produce a smaller quantity of output than what would be best from the
viewpoint of ideal economic efficiency.
c.
the additional revenue that can be generated from an increase in output will exceed the
firm's price.
d.
the firm can charge whatever it wants for its product since consumers have no alternatives.
192. Which of the following statements is true for a monopolist?
a.
a monopolist will charge the highest price for which he can sell units of his product.
b.
unregulated monopolists can gain by producing their chosen output at a low cost.
c.
if a firm has a monopoly, it will always be able to earn economic profit.
d.
none of the above statements are true.
193. Which of the following is a characteristic of an oligopolistic industry?
a.
interdependence of a firm's price and output decisions
b.
low barriers to entry
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c.
small output of individual firms relative to the total market
d.
a large number of competing firms
194. An oligopolistic firm that is deciding the price to charge, the output to produce, or the quality of
product to offer, must consider
a.
the regulatory price limits that are always present with oligopoly.
b.
the potential reactions of rivals in the market.
c.
the fact that per-unit costs will usually increase as the scale of production increases.
d.
that entry barriers into oligopolistic markets are low.
195. Even though a cartel is often profitable for its members, cartel arrangements contain the seeds of their
own disintegration because
a.
a price maintained above each cartel member's marginal cost provides each member with
an incentive to offer secret price reductions to attract additional customers.
b.
the profits earned by cartel members will induce others to enter the industry.
c.
cartel members will attempt to garner more of the total profit for themselves by cheating
on their agreement with other members.
d.
all of the above are correct.
196. Which of the following statements about monopoly is most accurate?
a.
The monopolist has no incentive to produce efficiently.
b.
Regardless of what is produced, the monopolist will use too many resources.
c.
A monopolist has no incentive to keep costs down.
d.
The monopolist "understocks" the market and charges too high a price.
197. Which of the following is the best explanation of why a lack of information is a problem when the
government wants to impose price regulation on a monopolist?
a.
the government does not have information about which firms are monopolies.
b.
firms that are monopolies do not have information about their level of profit or about
potential competition.
c.
consumers do not have information about which firms are competitive and which firms are
monopolies.
d.
regulators do not have information about the demand and marginal costs of the firms that
they regulate.
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198. Which of the following is true under natural monopoly?
a.
the monopolist will ignore consumers' desires.
b.
the marginal cost curve will lie below the average total cost curve.
c.
the monopolist will set price equal to marginal cost and will earn economic profits.
d.
output is produced under conditions of constant cost.
199. If a local community has only one doctor, the monopoly power of the physician will
a.
be small if entry barriers into the local market are high.
b.
depend on how many other physicians there are in the national market.
c.
be total since there are not any other providers of the same service in the local market.
d.
be minimal if the entry barriers restricting competition from other physicians are low.
200. Which of the following explains why firms in competitive price-searcher and competitive price-taker
markets will both have zero economic profits in the long run but a monopoly will not?
a.
There is always more than one firm in competitive price-searcher and competitive
price-taker markets.
b.
Both competitive price-searcher and competitive price-taker markets are characterized by
firms producing identical goods, but a monopoly is not.
c.
In both competitive price-searcher and competitive price-taker markets, the barriers to
entry are low; this is not true under a monopoly.
d.
A monopoly firm has a downward-sloping demand curve; firms in the other types of
markets do not.
201. In which of the following industries would we expect collusion to be most effective?
a.
retail gasoline, where most gas is sold by a large number of small dealers
b.
crude oil production, where most oil is sold by a small number of large sellers
c.
housing construction, an industry dominated by local firms that produce unique products
d.
soybean production, where there are large numbers of farmers in many countries
202. DELETE
a.
The monopolist undersupplies the market and charges too high a price.
b.
The monopolist is a revenue maximizer not a profit maximizer.
c.
A monopolist has little incentive to produce efficiently (at a low cost).
d.
All of the above are true.
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203. Under what conditions can a monopolist have potentially lower costs and possibly charge a lower price
than would exist if the market were competitive?
a.
when the monopolist operates on the inelastic portion of the demand curve
b.
when the monopolist is a profit maximizer rather than a revenue maximizer
c.
when substantial diseconomies of scale are present
d.
when substantial economies of scale are present
ESSAY
204. Monopoly is a word derived from Greek origins that means, roughly, single seller. Why is the
definition of monopoly as single seller inadequate in economic terms?
205. Mr. Stewart owns the only hardware store in a small Midwestern town. His nearest competition is
more than 50 miles away, yet he does not earn any economic profit. Does someone need to explain the
economic concept of monopoly to him?
206. Suppose all automobile manufacturers have collusively agreed to sell their cars at a uniform price. If a
firm wanted to break this agreement and not be detected, what would be one way to do this?
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207. Since its beginning, the cable television industry has been viewed as a natural monopoly. Typically,
cities would grant individual firms local monopolies and then regulate them. Is this a valid approach
from an economic perspective? What do you expect the future of the television-viewing market to
hold?
208. The Big River Power Company is a regulated monopolist with pricing structured such that the
stockholders receive a "fair" rate of return based on the firm's unit costs. Can economic thinking
predict how the company executive offices are likely to be furnished? Given a choice between Hawaii
and downtown Cleveland (20 miles away), where would we expect the Board of Directors to meet?
209. Why does the U.S. government maintain a monopoly in the delivery of first-class mail? Does the
Postal Service nevertheless face other forms of competition?
210. The Redwood City Council has decided that there is an overallocation of resources in the lawn-care
industry. Almost every homeowner owns a lawnmower, hose and sprinkler, seeder, spreader, etc., and
these items are used, at most, once a week. The council will establish a legal monopoly and select a
private firm that will be responsible for all lawn care in the city. What types of rent-seeking activities
can be expected as a result of this action?
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211. One answer to the problem of natural monopoly is provision of the good by a government-owned and
operated firm. Why is that option not used very often?

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