Economics

Non-Competitive Markets

Question:

How the efficiency may increase if two firms merge?

Answer:

 

  1. Suppose that initially there are two firms in an industry and both are same but inefficient.
  2. Their MC curves are at a high level and consequently they charge a higher price and produce less.
  3. They realize, however, that if they merge with each other – and thereby become a monopoly—they can reduce their cost.
  4. For instance, one firm may have excellent technical manpower but may not have good marketing skills, whereas the other may not have good technical manpower but possesses superior marketing knowledge by merging the resulting monopoly firms MC curve will be at a lower level and thus it will be more efficient firm.
  5. This, by itself will induce the monopoly to charge a price which is less and produce a quantity which is greater than when both firms were competing with each other.
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Non-Competitive Markets

Q 1.

What is the importance of monopoly?

Q 2.

What is a price-maker firm?

Q 3.

Which features of monopolistic competition are competitive in nature?

Q 4.

Under which market form, firm is a price-maker?

Q 5.

Under monopoly a firm sells the goods at a single price.

Q 6.

Why AR curve (demand curve) under monopolistic competition is more elastic than AR curve under monopoly?

Q 7.

Under oligopoly, there are large number of buyers and sellers.

Q 8.

How many firms are there in a monopoly market?

Q 9.

Which features of monopolistic competition are monopolistic in nature?

Q 10.

Why is the demand curve under monopoly less elastic as compared to the demand curve under monopolistic competition?

Q 11.

Under monopolistic competition there is only one seller of the product.

Q 12.

What is the value of MR when the demand curve is elastic?

Q 13.

Explain the main features of barriers to the entry of firms.

Q 14.

Demand curve facing a monopoly firm is a constraint for the monopolist."Comment.

Q 15.

What are the shapes of AR and MR curves under monopoly?

Q 16.

Define product differentiation.

Q 17.

List the three different ways in which oligopoly firms may behave.

Q 18.

Because of product differentiation under monopolistic competition, price tends to be higher than what it ought to have been in real terms and hence consumers suffer. How?

Q 19.

What is the reason for the long run equilibrium of a firm in monopolistic competition to be associated with zero profit?

Q 20.

Giving reasons, state whether the following statements are true or false.
Under monopoly all firms can sell at any price.

Q 21.

Price discrimination should be socially desirable. How?

Q 22.

What does Monopolistic Competition mean?

Q 23.

Under monopoly new firms can enter the industry to raise the supply.

Q 24.

Give reasons for the following statements:

  1. A perfectly competitive firm is a price-taker.
  2. Product differentiation is a characteristic feature of a monopolistic competitive market,
  3. A monopolist cannot fix both the quantity that he likes to produce and the price at which he would like to sell.

Q 25.

Under oligopoly though firms are free to take decisions about price and quantity to be sold but they do not change the price and hence buyers are deprived of the benefit of fall in price. Comment.

Q 26.

In monopoly, firm is different from industry.

Q 27.

How to reduce the incidence of selling cost under monopolistic competition because of which price tends to be higher than what it would have been if production cost would have been the sole basis?

Q 28.

In spite of having monopoly why the Indian Railways has not increased the fare for many years?

Q 29.

Give reasons for the following statements:

  1.  Demand curve facing a perfectly competitive firm is a horizontal straight line.
  2. Demand curve facing a monopolistic competitive firm is a downward sloping curve.
  3. Demand curve facing a monopoly firm is less elastic than that curve facing a monopolistic competitive firm.

Q 30.

How the efficiency may increase if two firms merge?

Q 31.

Explain the implication of the following:  The feature of  no close substitutes' under monopoly.

Q 32.

Compare between perfect competition and monopoly.

Q 33.

Under monopolistic competition, all the customers have perfect knowledge of the market conditions.

Q 34.

Although there are few (more than one) firms in oligopoly. Even these firms can enjoy monopoly power. How?

Q 35.

What is meant by prices being rigid? How can oligopoly behaviour lead to such an outcome?

Q 36.

Under monopolistic competition, a firm faces a perfectly elastic demand curve.

Q 37.

"A day without selling costs is nearly impossible". Comment.

Q 38.

Explain the feature of few firms in an oligopoly market.

Q 39.

What do you mean by duopoly?

Q 40.

In which form of market there is product differentiation?

Q 41.

Give the meaning of Oligopoly'.

Q 42.

If the firm in the toothpaste industry have the following market shares, which market structure would best describe the industiy? [1 Mark]

ncert-solutions-for-class-12-micro-economics-non-competitive-market-11

Q 43.

Suppose that the demand curve for the XYZ company slopes downward and to the right. Would you conclude that the firm is a price taker or a price maker? Give reasons.

Q 44.

Explain why the demand curve facing a firm under monopolistic competition is negatively sloped?

Q 45.

A monopolist can sell any quantity he likes at a price. Give reasons with true or false.

Q 46.

What is meant by price rigidity, under oligopoly.

Q 47.

Explain any two sources of restricted entry under monopoly.

Q 48.

Selling cost is a nail in the coffin of consumer's sovereignty. How?

Q 49.

Draw a demand curve in different market situation and also compare its elasticity of demand.

Q 50.

Discuss the relationship between total revenue, average revenue and marginal revenue under perfect competition and monopolistic competition. Use diagrams.