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Economics for your Classroom from
Ed Dolan’s Econ Blog
How Natural is Natural
Monopoly? The Case of China
and the Market f...
A Collision Jars the High-tech World
 On September 7, 2010 a Chinese fishing
boat collided with a Japanese Coast Guard
ve...
What is a Natural Monopoly?
 Economists define a natural monopoly as
an industry in which long-run average cost
is at a m...
What Are Rare Earths?
 Rare earth elements (REEs) are a
group of 17 related elements near the
middle of the periodic tabl...
Rare Earths are Not Really Rare
 Despite the name, rare earths
are not really all that rare
 All of them are more common...
China’s Dominance of REEs is Relatively Recent
 Until the 1960s, most REEs came
from “placer sands” in India, Brazil,
and...
The Role of Extraction Costs
 In part, China’s dominance of REEs
came from lower extraction costs
 At any given level of...
Tolerance of Environmental Damage Added to China’s Edge
 Mining REEs can cause serious
environmental damage
 Measures to...
Short-run vs. Long-run Supply
 Short-run supply of REEs is much less
elastic than long-run supply
 In the short run, sup...
Short-run vs. Long-run Demand
 Similarly, short-run demand is much less
elastic than long-run demand
 In the short run, ...
Low Short-run Elasticities Mean Volatile Prices
 Given low short-run elasticities of supply
and demand, China’s attempts ...
The Bottom Line: China Never Had a True Natural Monopoly
The bottom line:
 Despite its 97% market share, China
never had ...
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The Role of Extraction Costs China's Crumbling Rare Earth Monopoly

The Role of Extraction Costs
 In part, China’s dominance of REEs
came from lower extraction costs
 At any given level of output, producers
naturally draw from the lowest-cost
sources first
 China’s ore deposits are good, but not
uniquely good
 However, the combination of good ores
with low labor costs helped China take
market share away from US producers
May 12, 2015 Ed Dolan’s Econ Blog

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