Assume that one of the hot dog vendors successfully lobbies the city council to obtain the exclusive right to sell hot dogs within the city limits. This firm buys up all the rest of the hot dog vendors in the city and operates as a monopoly. Assume that this change doesn't affect demand and that the new monopoly's marginal cost curve corresponds exactly to the supply curve on the previous graph. Under this assumption, the following graph shows the demand (D), marginal revenue (MR), and marginal cost (MC) curves for the monopoly firm. Place the black point (plus symbol) on the following graph to indicate the profit-maximizing price and quantity of a monopolist. PRICE, COSTS AND REVENUE (Dollars per hot dog) 5.0 ཤ་བྷཱུ་ ྴ་རྒྱུུ་ ྴ་ཤཱ་བཱ་གྲཱ 0.5 Monopoly MC D MR 0 0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 QUANTITY (Hot dogs) Monopoly Outcome In the following table, enter the price and quantity that would arise in a perfectly competitive market; then enter the profit-maximizing price and quantity that would be chosen if a monopolist controlled this market. Market Structure Perfect Competition Monopoly Price (Dollars) Quantity (Hot dogs) Given the summary table of the two different market structures, you can infer that, in general, the price is higher under a and the quantity is higher under a 7. Comparing monopoly and perfect competition Consider the daily market for hot dogs in a small city. Suppose that this market is in long-run competitive equilibrium, with many hot dog stands in the city, each one selling the same kind of hot dogs. Therefore, each vendor is a price taker and possesses no market power. The following graph shows the demand (D) and supply curves (S= MC) in the market for hot dogs. Place the black point (plus symbol) on the graph to indicate the market price and quantity that will result from perfect competition. PRICE AND COSTS (Dollars per hot dog) 0.5 བྷྲ ༷ ྴ་ཤཱ་བྷ་ཛྙྰ་བླླ་ཤཱ་བ། 5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.0 0 0 30 60 90 Perfect Competition S=MC D 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 QUANTITY (Hot dogs) PC Outcome Assume that one of the hot dog vendors successfully lobbies the city council to obtain the exclusive right to sell hot dogs within the city limits. This firm buys up all the rest of the hot dog vendors in the city and operates as a monopoly. Assume that this change doesn't affect demand and that the new monopoly's marginal cost curve corresponds exactly to the supply curve on the previous graph. Under this assumption, the following graph shows the demand (D), marginal revenue (MR), and marginal cost (MC) curves for the monopoly firm. Place the black point (plus symbol) on the following graph to indicate the profit-maximizing price and quantity of a monopolist. 5.0 45 Monopoly
Assume that one of the hot dog vendors successfully lobbies the city council to obtain the exclusive right to sell hot dogs within the city limits. This firm buys up all the rest of the hot dog vendors in the city and operates as a monopoly. Assume that this change doesn't affect demand and that the new monopoly's marginal cost curve corresponds exactly to the supply curve on the previous graph. Under this assumption, the following graph shows the demand (D), marginal revenue (MR), and marginal cost (MC) curves for the monopoly firm. Place the black point (plus symbol) on the following graph to indicate the profit-maximizing price and quantity of a monopolist. PRICE, COSTS AND REVENUE (Dollars per hot dog) 5.0 ཤ་བྷཱུ་ ྴ་རྒྱུུ་ ྴ་ཤཱ་བཱ་གྲཱ 0.5 Monopoly MC D MR 0 0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 QUANTITY (Hot dogs) Monopoly Outcome In the following table, enter the price and quantity that would arise in a perfectly competitive market; then enter the profit-maximizing price and quantity that would be chosen if a monopolist controlled this market. Market Structure Perfect Competition Monopoly Price (Dollars) Quantity (Hot dogs) Given the summary table of the two different market structures, you can infer that, in general, the price is higher under a and the quantity is higher under a 7. Comparing monopoly and perfect competition Consider the daily market for hot dogs in a small city. Suppose that this market is in long-run competitive equilibrium, with many hot dog stands in the city, each one selling the same kind of hot dogs. Therefore, each vendor is a price taker and possesses no market power. The following graph shows the demand (D) and supply curves (S= MC) in the market for hot dogs. Place the black point (plus symbol) on the graph to indicate the market price and quantity that will result from perfect competition. PRICE AND COSTS (Dollars per hot dog) 0.5 བྷྲ ༷ ྴ་ཤཱ་བྷ་ཛྙྰ་བླླ་ཤཱ་བ། 5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.0 0 0 30 60 90 Perfect Competition S=MC D 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 QUANTITY (Hot dogs) PC Outcome Assume that one of the hot dog vendors successfully lobbies the city council to obtain the exclusive right to sell hot dogs within the city limits. This firm buys up all the rest of the hot dog vendors in the city and operates as a monopoly. Assume that this change doesn't affect demand and that the new monopoly's marginal cost curve corresponds exactly to the supply curve on the previous graph. Under this assumption, the following graph shows the demand (D), marginal revenue (MR), and marginal cost (MC) curves for the monopoly firm. Place the black point (plus symbol) on the following graph to indicate the profit-maximizing price and quantity of a monopolist. 5.0 45 Monopoly
Chapter1: Making Economics Decisions
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 1QTC
Related questions
Question
![Assume that one of the hot dog vendors successfully lobbies the city council to obtain the exclusive right to sell hot dogs within the city limits. This
firm buys up all the rest of the hot dog vendors in the city and operates as a monopoly. Assume that this change doesn't affect demand and that the
new monopoly's marginal cost curve corresponds exactly to the supply curve on the previous graph. Under this assumption, the following graph shows
the demand (D), marginal revenue (MR), and marginal cost (MC) curves for the monopoly firm.
Place the black point (plus symbol) on the following graph to indicate the profit-maximizing price and quantity of a monopolist.
PRICE, COSTS
AND REVENUE (Dollars per hot dog)
5.0
ཤ་བྷཱུ་ ྴ་རྒྱུུ་ ྴ་ཤཱ་བཱ་གྲཱ
0.5
Monopoly
MC
D
MR
0
0
30
60
90
120 150 180 210 240
270 300
QUANTITY (Hot dogs)
Monopoly Outcome
In the following table, enter the price and quantity that would arise in a perfectly competitive market; then enter the profit-maximizing price and
quantity that would be chosen if a monopolist controlled this market.
Market Structure
Perfect Competition
Monopoly
Price
(Dollars)
Quantity
(Hot dogs)
Given the summary table of the two different market structures, you can infer that, in general, the price is higher under a
and the quantity is higher under a](/v2/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcontent.bartleby.com%2Fqna-images%2Fquestion%2Fa6ea35f4-cb93-4d80-9d38-4197f640b54a%2Fb5a8bbd1-4dba-4723-8dcc-0852301aa510%2Fyqsmx3q_processed.png&w=3840&q=75)
Transcribed Image Text:Assume that one of the hot dog vendors successfully lobbies the city council to obtain the exclusive right to sell hot dogs within the city limits. This
firm buys up all the rest of the hot dog vendors in the city and operates as a monopoly. Assume that this change doesn't affect demand and that the
new monopoly's marginal cost curve corresponds exactly to the supply curve on the previous graph. Under this assumption, the following graph shows
the demand (D), marginal revenue (MR), and marginal cost (MC) curves for the monopoly firm.
Place the black point (plus symbol) on the following graph to indicate the profit-maximizing price and quantity of a monopolist.
PRICE, COSTS
AND REVENUE (Dollars per hot dog)
5.0
ཤ་བྷཱུ་ ྴ་རྒྱུུ་ ྴ་ཤཱ་བཱ་གྲཱ
0.5
Monopoly
MC
D
MR
0
0
30
60
90
120 150 180 210 240
270 300
QUANTITY (Hot dogs)
Monopoly Outcome
In the following table, enter the price and quantity that would arise in a perfectly competitive market; then enter the profit-maximizing price and
quantity that would be chosen if a monopolist controlled this market.
Market Structure
Perfect Competition
Monopoly
Price
(Dollars)
Quantity
(Hot dogs)
Given the summary table of the two different market structures, you can infer that, in general, the price is higher under a
and the quantity is higher under a
![7. Comparing monopoly and perfect competition
Consider the daily market for hot dogs in a small city. Suppose that this market is in long-run competitive equilibrium, with many hot dog stands in
the city, each one selling the same kind of hot dogs. Therefore, each vendor is a price taker and possesses no market power.
The following graph shows the demand (D) and supply curves (S= MC) in the market for hot dogs.
Place the black point (plus symbol) on the graph to indicate the market price and quantity that will result from perfect competition.
PRICE AND COSTS (Dollars per hot dog)
0.5
བྷྲ ༷ ྴ་ཤཱ་བྷ་ཛྙྰ་བླླ་ཤཱ་བ།
5.0
4.5
4.0
3.5
3.0
2.5
2.0
1.0
0
0
30
60
90
Perfect Competition
S=MC
D
120 150 180 210 240 270 300
QUANTITY (Hot dogs)
PC Outcome
Assume that one of the hot dog vendors successfully lobbies the city council to obtain the exclusive right to sell hot dogs within the city limits. This
firm buys up all the rest of the hot dog vendors in the city and operates as a monopoly. Assume that this change doesn't affect demand and that the
new monopoly's marginal cost curve corresponds exactly to the supply curve on the previous graph. Under this assumption, the following graph shows
the demand (D), marginal revenue (MR), and marginal cost (MC) curves for the monopoly firm.
Place the black point (plus symbol) on the following graph to indicate the profit-maximizing price and quantity of a monopolist.
5.0
45
Monopoly](/v2/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcontent.bartleby.com%2Fqna-images%2Fquestion%2Fa6ea35f4-cb93-4d80-9d38-4197f640b54a%2Fb5a8bbd1-4dba-4723-8dcc-0852301aa510%2Fibij0as_processed.png&w=3840&q=75)
Transcribed Image Text:7. Comparing monopoly and perfect competition
Consider the daily market for hot dogs in a small city. Suppose that this market is in long-run competitive equilibrium, with many hot dog stands in
the city, each one selling the same kind of hot dogs. Therefore, each vendor is a price taker and possesses no market power.
The following graph shows the demand (D) and supply curves (S= MC) in the market for hot dogs.
Place the black point (plus symbol) on the graph to indicate the market price and quantity that will result from perfect competition.
PRICE AND COSTS (Dollars per hot dog)
0.5
བྷྲ ༷ ྴ་ཤཱ་བྷ་ཛྙྰ་བླླ་ཤཱ་བ།
5.0
4.5
4.0
3.5
3.0
2.5
2.0
1.0
0
0
30
60
90
Perfect Competition
S=MC
D
120 150 180 210 240 270 300
QUANTITY (Hot dogs)
PC Outcome
Assume that one of the hot dog vendors successfully lobbies the city council to obtain the exclusive right to sell hot dogs within the city limits. This
firm buys up all the rest of the hot dog vendors in the city and operates as a monopoly. Assume that this change doesn't affect demand and that the
new monopoly's marginal cost curve corresponds exactly to the supply curve on the previous graph. Under this assumption, the following graph shows
the demand (D), marginal revenue (MR), and marginal cost (MC) curves for the monopoly firm.
Place the black point (plus symbol) on the following graph to indicate the profit-maximizing price and quantity of a monopolist.
5.0
45
Monopoly
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