SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 27
Keith Cowling & Dennis C. Mueller (1978)
COURSE OF INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATION
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION PROGRAM
PRESENTED BY: JC PHAM, ID: A1008300
 Introduction & Research Background
 Study Objectives
 The Four substantive Criticisms of
Harberger-type approaches
 Methodology & Empirical estimates
of the social cost of monopoly power
 Conclusions
 The monopolist charges a higher price than a
perfectly competitive firm would charge
 The monopolist also produces less than a
perfectly competitive market
 It is suspected that monopoly is not good for
consumers
 A monopoly (from Greek monos (alone or single) + polein (to
sell)) exists when a specific person or enterprise is the only
supplier of a particular commodity
 Characteristics
 Profit Maximizer: Maximizes profits.
 Price Maker: Decides the price of the good or product to be sold.
 High Barriers to Entry: Other sellers are unable to enter the market
 Single seller: the whole market is being served by a single
company, and for practical purposes, the company is the same as the
industry.
 Price Discrimination: A monopolist can change the price and quality
of the product. He sells more quantities charging less price for the
product in a very elastic market and sells less quantities charging high
price in a less elastic market.
 Sources of monopoly power: three major types of barriers to
entry; economic, legal and deliberate. In addition barriers to
exit may be a source of market power.
 Attention to the social welfare loss under monopoly
conditions was led by the pioneering work of
Harberger in 1954
▪ 0.1 of 1% of GNP of USA
▪ Schwartzman (1960), Scherer (1970),Worcester (1973)
 Subsequent writers have considerably expanded our
understanding of the extent of the losses involved
 Kamerschen (1966): the estimate as high as 6%
 Posner (1975): the real problem “the social cost”, as much
as 30% of industry sales in some industries
 Abram Bergson (1973): a “general equilibrium model” with
2 key parameters as an alternative & a series of
hypothetical estimates of welfare losses from monopoly
 The monopolist will sell a lesser quantity
of goods at a higher price than would
companies by perfect competition
 Monopoly pricing creates a “deadweight
loss” (DWL) referring to potential gains
that went neither to the monopolist nor
to consumers
 It is often argued that monopolies tend to
become less efficient and less innovative
over time, becoming "complacent“
 This very loss of psychological efficiency
can increase a potential competition
 The theory of “contestable markets”
 Traditionally the social loss has measured in terms of
the deadweight loss (DWL) of monopoly, that is
costlessly created and maintained
 The opportunity to earn monopoly rents results in
resources being invested in unproductive activities in
their pursuit that “rent seeking” behaviors occurs
(Tullock;1967).
 Furthermore, resources may be expended wastefully
by opponents to the creation of a monopoly; in other
words, a reaction such as "rent protection" may be
provoked.
 Monopolists will incur both strategic and administrative
expenses
 Level several objections against the
Harberger-type approach
 Calculate estimates of the welfare loss
from monopoly, empirical in US and UK
industries
 Employ a partial equilibrium framework
with all the necessary assumptions it
required (Bergson, 1973)
The welfare losses from monopoly are
really Significant!
 The interdependence of dpi and dqi
 The measurement of monopoly
profits
 The aggregation biases from using
industry data
 Welfare loss in the acquisition of
monopoly power
 In the partial equilibrium formula
for welfare loss is
1/2dpdq, where low value of dp
were observed & low value of dq
were assumed:
 If ti is small, thenWL is
insignificant
 In Harberger’s case, the price
elasticity of demand in all
industries were unitary
 Small estimates of welfare loss
 Assuming profit maximizing behavior:
 Price elasticity E = Pi/(Pi-MCi) (1)
 Using (1), we obtain welfare loss (WL) estimate by
individual firms from their price/cost
margins, giving the change in its output implied by
Ei
 To the extent other firms also charge high prices, the
totalWL associated with firm i’s market power exceeds
the welfare loss we estimate
 Since Harberger observed low values of dpi and yet
chose to assume that Ei = 1  dqi was also very small
 Assuming interdependence: the WL is calculated by:
 dWi = ½ dpi/pi x dqi/qi x piqi (2)
Where: dpi/pi = 1/Ei and dqi/qi = Ei x dpi/pi = 1
Therefore: dpi piqi
dWi = x (3)
pi 2
Then assuming constant cost, we can rewrite (3) in term
of profits:
∏i piqi ∏i
dWi = x = (4)
piqi 2 2
 The obvious measure of monopoly profit is the excess of actual
profits over long-run (LR) competitive returns.
 Economic in equilibrium: the competitive rate is the minimum profit rate
compatible with LR survival
 Monopoly profit is thus the difference btw actual profits and
profits consistent with this minimum rate with:
 All would earn profit equal or greater than the minimum
 Actual estimateWL under monopoly using perfect competition as the
standard of comparison
 While Harberger & all subsequent studies: based the monopoly profit
estimate on the size of the deviation btw actual profit rates and the
mean rate, i.e. an industry whose profit rate was 5% below the mean
profit rate was considered to have created as large a WL as an
industry whose profits are 5% above the mean; and assumed the
degree of monopoly equalized across all firms therefore the estimate of
WL is biased downwards.
 Previous studies used industry data at a fairly high
level of aggregation, including earning negative
economic profit firms
 Implicitly assumed that the monopoly profits earned by
the most profitable firms in the industry are somehow
offset those experiencing transitory losses
 The estimates of all previous studies through the
assumption of a constant Ei across all industries
 The profit margin’s appearance as a squared term in the
welfare loss formula & further biases the WL estimate
downwards!
 The previous studies underestimate the social
costs of monopoly by failing to recognize the costs
involved in attempts to gain & retain monopoly
power
 Form of investment in excess production
capability, excessive ads or R&D activities…
 Estimate ofWL therefore underestimate social costs of
monopoly in 2 ways:
▪ Understating monopoly rents  understate the distortions in
outputs monopoly produces
▪ Failing to include these additional expenditures as part of the
costs of monopoly
 Three adjustments to measureWL :
 Advertising is added to monopoly profit
 All of advertising is added to the welfare losses, this
takes the extreme view that ads as merely an
instrument for secure market power
 All of measured, after-tax profits above the
competitive cost of capital are used as the estimate of
the expenditure incurred by others to obtain control of
the monopoly rents
 Let C0 be observed
costs, including investment-
type outlays & P0 observed
price that consistent with
monopoly firm’s demand
schedule D0
 Under more inelastic demand
schedule assumption, both
profits (∏) and welfare loss (L)
are much larger
 An alternative procedure for
calculating WL: estimate
Price/cost margins from data
on demand elasticity?
 Provide two sets of estimate, one based on our
assumptions (∆Wk
CM) , the other based on Harberger-
type assumptions (∆Wk
H), both measured at the firm-
level, in US & UK respectively
 Range of four estimate define as following:
 K=1, the one (∆Wk
CM) based on interdependence of dpi and
dqi, the other (∆Wk
H) based on the Harberger methodology
 K=2, the same calculations are performed but in calculating
dpi, ads expenditure (Ai) is deducted from cost
 K=3, we add in Ads as a social cost
 K=4, we also add in monopoly profits after-tax as a further
element of social cost.At this point, the appropriated profit
measure is before tax profit
 Sample: companies operating in both intermediate & final
goods markets
 Assumption of demand schedule for an intermediate represents
a derived demand schedule (Marshallian model)
 To estimate monopoly profits: using the return rates in
stock markets:
 Regarded to be fairly close to satisfying the free-entry and – exit
requirement of a competitive industry
 All existing monopoly rents are fully capitalized at the beginning
of the period
 Changes in monopoly rents over the period are accurately
anticipated
 The estimate of the competitive return on capital:
▪ in US :The Fisher- Lorie index of returns (1963-1966): 12%
▪ In UK:The pretax real cost of capital from 1968-69 (Flemming et al.; 1976):
8.15%
 The sample of 734 firms on the COMPUSTAT tape in
1963-6 period
 The firms are ranked according to the size ofWL as
measured by ∆Wk
CM
 GM lead the list: annual WL over $1.78billion (>1/4 of 1%
of average GNP during the period)
 Most of the other of the top20 are names expected
 6 of 40 largestWL are accounted for by regulated firms ( 3
telephone companies & 3 airlines) in which ads made up all
or most of the losses
 The obtained estimates ranging btw 4 and 13% of GCPVS.
the range from 0.4 and 7% for the Harberger approach
 The same basis as the US estimates, contenting with
an analysis of the top 103 firms in the UK from the
periods 1968/9 and 1970/4, these firms were
responsible for roughly one-third of the GNP
 Ads expenditure was estimated by aggregating up
from the brand level (TV & press)
 BP& Shell dominate the table, whichWL associated with BP
alone is roughly a quarter of 1% of GNP
 The results of periods 1970/4 look much like the 1968/9
despite the rapid inflation in UK in this time
 The aggregate estimates ofWL for ∆Wk
CM range btw 3.9
and 7.2% of GCP for the 1968/9 periodVS. Harberger
approach estimates ofWL btw 0.2 and 3% of GCP
 The evidence suggest that significant welfare loss
due to monopoly power
 Any attempts to take large amount of
investment-type expenditures beyond the ads
and adjust demand elasticity accordingly, while
maintaining the assumption that companies do
posses and exercise market power will lead to
larger estimates ofWL.
 The implications of potential important
policies, ex: antitrust towards to most significant
contributors to these losses
 Tirole, J., (1988) : TheTheory of Industrial
Organisation, MIT Press, Cambridge (MA).
 Krueger,A. (1972) : "The Political Economy of Rent
Seeking" in American Economic Review.
 Posner, R., (1975) : "The Social Costs of Monopoly
and Regulation" Journal of Political Economy.
 Alan Dunne, Rent Seeking and the Social Costs of
Monopoly, visit
http://www.maths.tcd.ie/local/JUNK/econrev/ser/ht
ml/rent.html on 26Nov, 2012
 Monopoly, visit
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopoly#Sources_of
_monopoly_power on 26Nov, 2012
THANK YOU VERY MUCH
FOR YOUR ATTENTION!
ANY COMMENTS &
QUESTIONS PLEASE?

More Related Content

Similar to Keith Cowling & Dennis C. Mueller (1978)-The social costs of monopoly power

Social welfare is maximum in case of imperfect competition
Social welfare is maximum in case of imperfect competitionSocial welfare is maximum in case of imperfect competition
Social welfare is maximum in case of imperfect competitionAkeeb Siddiqui
 
managerial policy Defin+industry+competition
managerial policy Defin+industry+competitionmanagerial policy Defin+industry+competition
managerial policy Defin+industry+competitionAshar Azam
 
Chapter 13A monopolistically competitive market is characterized.docx
Chapter 13A monopolistically competitive market is characterized.docxChapter 13A monopolistically competitive market is characterized.docx
Chapter 13A monopolistically competitive market is characterized.docxketurahhazelhurst
 
Monopolistic competition & oligopoly
Monopolistic competition & oligopolyMonopolistic competition & oligopoly
Monopolistic competition & oligopolyCarmela Grace Gavino
 
1.8.4 Positive and negative externalities in consumption and production.pptx
1.8.4 Positive and negative externalities in consumption and production.pptx1.8.4 Positive and negative externalities in consumption and production.pptx
1.8.4 Positive and negative externalities in consumption and production.pptxIsmail16397
 
Markusen lectures-may2010
Markusen lectures-may2010Markusen lectures-may2010
Markusen lectures-may2010Thanh Thanh
 
CFO11e_micro_ch13.ppt
CFO11e_micro_ch13.pptCFO11e_micro_ch13.ppt
CFO11e_micro_ch13.pptHaider Ali
 
A summary of macroeconomics
A summary of macroeconomicsA summary of macroeconomics
A summary of macroeconomicsIRAWANPERWANDA
 
Extra Credit1. A natural monopoly” exists whenA .docx
Extra Credit1.  A natural monopoly” exists whenA .docxExtra Credit1.  A natural monopoly” exists whenA .docx
Extra Credit1. A natural monopoly” exists whenA .docxmecklenburgstrelitzh
 

Similar to Keith Cowling & Dennis C. Mueller (1978)-The social costs of monopoly power (20)

Social welfare is maximum in case of imperfect competition
Social welfare is maximum in case of imperfect competitionSocial welfare is maximum in case of imperfect competition
Social welfare is maximum in case of imperfect competition
 
managerial policy Defin+industry+competition
managerial policy Defin+industry+competitionmanagerial policy Defin+industry+competition
managerial policy Defin+industry+competition
 
Chapter 13A monopolistically competitive market is characterized.docx
Chapter 13A monopolistically competitive market is characterized.docxChapter 13A monopolistically competitive market is characterized.docx
Chapter 13A monopolistically competitive market is characterized.docx
 
Monopolistic competition & oligopoly
Monopolistic competition & oligopolyMonopolistic competition & oligopoly
Monopolistic competition & oligopoly
 
Ch13
Ch13Ch13
Ch13
 
Ch13
Ch13 Ch13
Ch13
 
1.8.4 Positive and negative externalities in consumption and production.pptx
1.8.4 Positive and negative externalities in consumption and production.pptx1.8.4 Positive and negative externalities in consumption and production.pptx
1.8.4 Positive and negative externalities in consumption and production.pptx
 
Model Answers.docx
Model Answers.docxModel Answers.docx
Model Answers.docx
 
Paper
PaperPaper
Paper
 
Markusen lectures-may2010
Markusen lectures-may2010Markusen lectures-may2010
Markusen lectures-may2010
 
CFO11e_micro_ch13.ppt
CFO11e_micro_ch13.pptCFO11e_micro_ch13.ppt
CFO11e_micro_ch13.ppt
 
Ppf
PpfPpf
Ppf
 
A summary of macroeconomics
A summary of macroeconomicsA summary of macroeconomics
A summary of macroeconomics
 
Managerial economics
Managerial economicsManagerial economics
Managerial economics
 
Managerial economics (1)
Managerial economics (1)Managerial economics (1)
Managerial economics (1)
 
Managerial economics.
Managerial economics.Managerial economics.
Managerial economics.
 
Managerial economics
Managerial economicsManagerial economics
Managerial economics
 
Pricing in Economics
Pricing in Economics Pricing in Economics
Pricing in Economics
 
Exam Answers.pdf
Exam Answers.pdfExam Answers.pdf
Exam Answers.pdf
 
Extra Credit1. A natural monopoly” exists whenA .docx
Extra Credit1.  A natural monopoly” exists whenA .docxExtra Credit1.  A natural monopoly” exists whenA .docx
Extra Credit1. A natural monopoly” exists whenA .docx
 

More from jcpham

Part4-Analysis of the Internal environment.ppt
Part4-Analysis of  the Internal environment.pptPart4-Analysis of  the Internal environment.ppt
Part4-Analysis of the Internal environment.pptjcpham
 
Kotabe global competitive marketing strategy ch08
Kotabe global competitive marketing strategy ch08Kotabe global competitive marketing strategy ch08
Kotabe global competitive marketing strategy ch08jcpham
 
Jc small multinational-enterprises_under_globalization_knight
Jc small multinational-enterprises_under_globalization_knightJc small multinational-enterprises_under_globalization_knight
Jc small multinational-enterprises_under_globalization_knightjcpham
 
business ethics in a global economy
business ethics in a global economybusiness ethics in a global economy
business ethics in a global economyjcpham
 
Guanxi connections as subtitutes for formal institutional support
Guanxi connections as subtitutes for formal institutional supportGuanxi connections as subtitutes for formal institutional support
Guanxi connections as subtitutes for formal institutional supportjcpham
 
The hawthorne experiments-roethlisberger1941
The hawthorne experiments-roethlisberger1941The hawthorne experiments-roethlisberger1941
The hawthorne experiments-roethlisberger1941jcpham
 
Beyond Valence In Customer Dissatisfaction A Review And New Findings On Behav...
Beyond Valence In Customer Dissatisfaction A Review And New Findings On Behav...Beyond Valence In Customer Dissatisfaction A Review And New Findings On Behav...
Beyond Valence In Customer Dissatisfaction A Review And New Findings On Behav...jcpham
 

More from jcpham (7)

Part4-Analysis of the Internal environment.ppt
Part4-Analysis of  the Internal environment.pptPart4-Analysis of  the Internal environment.ppt
Part4-Analysis of the Internal environment.ppt
 
Kotabe global competitive marketing strategy ch08
Kotabe global competitive marketing strategy ch08Kotabe global competitive marketing strategy ch08
Kotabe global competitive marketing strategy ch08
 
Jc small multinational-enterprises_under_globalization_knight
Jc small multinational-enterprises_under_globalization_knightJc small multinational-enterprises_under_globalization_knight
Jc small multinational-enterprises_under_globalization_knight
 
business ethics in a global economy
business ethics in a global economybusiness ethics in a global economy
business ethics in a global economy
 
Guanxi connections as subtitutes for formal institutional support
Guanxi connections as subtitutes for formal institutional supportGuanxi connections as subtitutes for formal institutional support
Guanxi connections as subtitutes for formal institutional support
 
The hawthorne experiments-roethlisberger1941
The hawthorne experiments-roethlisberger1941The hawthorne experiments-roethlisberger1941
The hawthorne experiments-roethlisberger1941
 
Beyond Valence In Customer Dissatisfaction A Review And New Findings On Behav...
Beyond Valence In Customer Dissatisfaction A Review And New Findings On Behav...Beyond Valence In Customer Dissatisfaction A Review And New Findings On Behav...
Beyond Valence In Customer Dissatisfaction A Review And New Findings On Behav...
 

Recently uploaded

John Halpern sued for sexual assault.pdf
John Halpern sued for sexual assault.pdfJohn Halpern sued for sexual assault.pdf
John Halpern sued for sexual assault.pdfAmzadHosen3
 
👉Chandigarh Call Girls 👉9878799926👉Just Call👉Chandigarh Call Girl In Chandiga...
👉Chandigarh Call Girls 👉9878799926👉Just Call👉Chandigarh Call Girl In Chandiga...👉Chandigarh Call Girls 👉9878799926👉Just Call👉Chandigarh Call Girl In Chandiga...
👉Chandigarh Call Girls 👉9878799926👉Just Call👉Chandigarh Call Girl In Chandiga...rajveerescorts2022
 
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023Neil Kimberley
 
Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...
Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...
Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...Roland Driesen
 
Russian Call Girls In Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service In 24/7 Delh...
Russian Call Girls In Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service In 24/7 Delh...Russian Call Girls In Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service In 24/7 Delh...
Russian Call Girls In Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service In 24/7 Delh...lizamodels9
 
Business Model Canvas (BMC)- A new venture concept
Business Model Canvas (BMC)-  A new venture conceptBusiness Model Canvas (BMC)-  A new venture concept
Business Model Canvas (BMC)- A new venture conceptP&CO
 
Quick Doctor In Kuwait +2773`7758`557 Kuwait Doha Qatar Dubai Abu Dhabi Sharj...
Quick Doctor In Kuwait +2773`7758`557 Kuwait Doha Qatar Dubai Abu Dhabi Sharj...Quick Doctor In Kuwait +2773`7758`557 Kuwait Doha Qatar Dubai Abu Dhabi Sharj...
Quick Doctor In Kuwait +2773`7758`557 Kuwait Doha Qatar Dubai Abu Dhabi Sharj...daisycvs
 
Falcon's Invoice Discounting: Your Path to Prosperity
Falcon's Invoice Discounting: Your Path to ProsperityFalcon's Invoice Discounting: Your Path to Prosperity
Falcon's Invoice Discounting: Your Path to Prosperityhemanthkumar470700
 
The Path to Product Excellence: Avoiding Common Pitfalls and Enhancing Commun...
The Path to Product Excellence: Avoiding Common Pitfalls and Enhancing Commun...The Path to Product Excellence: Avoiding Common Pitfalls and Enhancing Commun...
The Path to Product Excellence: Avoiding Common Pitfalls and Enhancing Commun...Aggregage
 
Uneak White's Personal Brand Exploration Presentation
Uneak White's Personal Brand Exploration PresentationUneak White's Personal Brand Exploration Presentation
Uneak White's Personal Brand Exploration Presentationuneakwhite
 
Phases of Negotiation .pptx
 Phases of Negotiation .pptx Phases of Negotiation .pptx
Phases of Negotiation .pptxnandhinijagan9867
 
Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876
Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876
Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876dlhescort
 
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 MayIt will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 MayNZSG
 
FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756
FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756
FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756dollysharma2066
 
Organizational Transformation Lead with Culture
Organizational Transformation Lead with CultureOrganizational Transformation Lead with Culture
Organizational Transformation Lead with CultureSeta Wicaksana
 
Pharma Works Profile of Karan Communications
Pharma Works Profile of Karan CommunicationsPharma Works Profile of Karan Communications
Pharma Works Profile of Karan Communicationskarancommunications
 
Enhancing and Restoring Safety & Quality Cultures - Dave Litwiller - May 2024...
Enhancing and Restoring Safety & Quality Cultures - Dave Litwiller - May 2024...Enhancing and Restoring Safety & Quality Cultures - Dave Litwiller - May 2024...
Enhancing and Restoring Safety & Quality Cultures - Dave Litwiller - May 2024...Dave Litwiller
 
Cracking the Cultural Competence Code.pptx
Cracking the Cultural Competence Code.pptxCracking the Cultural Competence Code.pptx
Cracking the Cultural Competence Code.pptxWorkforce Group
 

Recently uploaded (20)

John Halpern sued for sexual assault.pdf
John Halpern sued for sexual assault.pdfJohn Halpern sued for sexual assault.pdf
John Halpern sued for sexual assault.pdf
 
👉Chandigarh Call Girls 👉9878799926👉Just Call👉Chandigarh Call Girl In Chandiga...
👉Chandigarh Call Girls 👉9878799926👉Just Call👉Chandigarh Call Girl In Chandiga...👉Chandigarh Call Girls 👉9878799926👉Just Call👉Chandigarh Call Girl In Chandiga...
👉Chandigarh Call Girls 👉9878799926👉Just Call👉Chandigarh Call Girl In Chandiga...
 
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
 
Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...
Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...
Ensure the security of your HCL environment by applying the Zero Trust princi...
 
Russian Call Girls In Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service In 24/7 Delh...
Russian Call Girls In Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service In 24/7 Delh...Russian Call Girls In Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service In 24/7 Delh...
Russian Call Girls In Gurgaon ❤️8448577510 ⊹Best Escorts Service In 24/7 Delh...
 
Business Model Canvas (BMC)- A new venture concept
Business Model Canvas (BMC)-  A new venture conceptBusiness Model Canvas (BMC)-  A new venture concept
Business Model Canvas (BMC)- A new venture concept
 
Quick Doctor In Kuwait +2773`7758`557 Kuwait Doha Qatar Dubai Abu Dhabi Sharj...
Quick Doctor In Kuwait +2773`7758`557 Kuwait Doha Qatar Dubai Abu Dhabi Sharj...Quick Doctor In Kuwait +2773`7758`557 Kuwait Doha Qatar Dubai Abu Dhabi Sharj...
Quick Doctor In Kuwait +2773`7758`557 Kuwait Doha Qatar Dubai Abu Dhabi Sharj...
 
unwanted pregnancy Kit [+918133066128] Abortion Pills IN Dubai UAE Abudhabi
unwanted pregnancy Kit [+918133066128] Abortion Pills IN Dubai UAE Abudhabiunwanted pregnancy Kit [+918133066128] Abortion Pills IN Dubai UAE Abudhabi
unwanted pregnancy Kit [+918133066128] Abortion Pills IN Dubai UAE Abudhabi
 
Falcon's Invoice Discounting: Your Path to Prosperity
Falcon's Invoice Discounting: Your Path to ProsperityFalcon's Invoice Discounting: Your Path to Prosperity
Falcon's Invoice Discounting: Your Path to Prosperity
 
Falcon Invoice Discounting platform in india
Falcon Invoice Discounting platform in indiaFalcon Invoice Discounting platform in india
Falcon Invoice Discounting platform in india
 
The Path to Product Excellence: Avoiding Common Pitfalls and Enhancing Commun...
The Path to Product Excellence: Avoiding Common Pitfalls and Enhancing Commun...The Path to Product Excellence: Avoiding Common Pitfalls and Enhancing Commun...
The Path to Product Excellence: Avoiding Common Pitfalls and Enhancing Commun...
 
Uneak White's Personal Brand Exploration Presentation
Uneak White's Personal Brand Exploration PresentationUneak White's Personal Brand Exploration Presentation
Uneak White's Personal Brand Exploration Presentation
 
Phases of Negotiation .pptx
 Phases of Negotiation .pptx Phases of Negotiation .pptx
Phases of Negotiation .pptx
 
Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876
Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876
Call Girls in Delhi, Escort Service Available 24x7 in Delhi 959961-/-3876
 
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 MayIt will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
 
FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756
FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756
FULL ENJOY Call Girls In Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi Contact Us 8377877756
 
Organizational Transformation Lead with Culture
Organizational Transformation Lead with CultureOrganizational Transformation Lead with Culture
Organizational Transformation Lead with Culture
 
Pharma Works Profile of Karan Communications
Pharma Works Profile of Karan CommunicationsPharma Works Profile of Karan Communications
Pharma Works Profile of Karan Communications
 
Enhancing and Restoring Safety & Quality Cultures - Dave Litwiller - May 2024...
Enhancing and Restoring Safety & Quality Cultures - Dave Litwiller - May 2024...Enhancing and Restoring Safety & Quality Cultures - Dave Litwiller - May 2024...
Enhancing and Restoring Safety & Quality Cultures - Dave Litwiller - May 2024...
 
Cracking the Cultural Competence Code.pptx
Cracking the Cultural Competence Code.pptxCracking the Cultural Competence Code.pptx
Cracking the Cultural Competence Code.pptx
 

Keith Cowling & Dennis C. Mueller (1978)-The social costs of monopoly power

  • 1. Keith Cowling & Dennis C. Mueller (1978) COURSE OF INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATION INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION PROGRAM PRESENTED BY: JC PHAM, ID: A1008300
  • 2.  Introduction & Research Background  Study Objectives  The Four substantive Criticisms of Harberger-type approaches  Methodology & Empirical estimates of the social cost of monopoly power  Conclusions
  • 3.  The monopolist charges a higher price than a perfectly competitive firm would charge  The monopolist also produces less than a perfectly competitive market  It is suspected that monopoly is not good for consumers
  • 4.  A monopoly (from Greek monos (alone or single) + polein (to sell)) exists when a specific person or enterprise is the only supplier of a particular commodity  Characteristics  Profit Maximizer: Maximizes profits.  Price Maker: Decides the price of the good or product to be sold.  High Barriers to Entry: Other sellers are unable to enter the market  Single seller: the whole market is being served by a single company, and for practical purposes, the company is the same as the industry.  Price Discrimination: A monopolist can change the price and quality of the product. He sells more quantities charging less price for the product in a very elastic market and sells less quantities charging high price in a less elastic market.  Sources of monopoly power: three major types of barriers to entry; economic, legal and deliberate. In addition barriers to exit may be a source of market power.
  • 5.  Attention to the social welfare loss under monopoly conditions was led by the pioneering work of Harberger in 1954 ▪ 0.1 of 1% of GNP of USA ▪ Schwartzman (1960), Scherer (1970),Worcester (1973)  Subsequent writers have considerably expanded our understanding of the extent of the losses involved  Kamerschen (1966): the estimate as high as 6%  Posner (1975): the real problem “the social cost”, as much as 30% of industry sales in some industries  Abram Bergson (1973): a “general equilibrium model” with 2 key parameters as an alternative & a series of hypothetical estimates of welfare losses from monopoly
  • 6.  The monopolist will sell a lesser quantity of goods at a higher price than would companies by perfect competition  Monopoly pricing creates a “deadweight loss” (DWL) referring to potential gains that went neither to the monopolist nor to consumers  It is often argued that monopolies tend to become less efficient and less innovative over time, becoming "complacent“  This very loss of psychological efficiency can increase a potential competition  The theory of “contestable markets”
  • 7.  Traditionally the social loss has measured in terms of the deadweight loss (DWL) of monopoly, that is costlessly created and maintained  The opportunity to earn monopoly rents results in resources being invested in unproductive activities in their pursuit that “rent seeking” behaviors occurs (Tullock;1967).  Furthermore, resources may be expended wastefully by opponents to the creation of a monopoly; in other words, a reaction such as "rent protection" may be provoked.  Monopolists will incur both strategic and administrative expenses
  • 8.  Level several objections against the Harberger-type approach  Calculate estimates of the welfare loss from monopoly, empirical in US and UK industries  Employ a partial equilibrium framework with all the necessary assumptions it required (Bergson, 1973) The welfare losses from monopoly are really Significant!
  • 9.  The interdependence of dpi and dqi  The measurement of monopoly profits  The aggregation biases from using industry data  Welfare loss in the acquisition of monopoly power
  • 10.  In the partial equilibrium formula for welfare loss is 1/2dpdq, where low value of dp were observed & low value of dq were assumed:  If ti is small, thenWL is insignificant  In Harberger’s case, the price elasticity of demand in all industries were unitary  Small estimates of welfare loss
  • 11.  Assuming profit maximizing behavior:  Price elasticity E = Pi/(Pi-MCi) (1)  Using (1), we obtain welfare loss (WL) estimate by individual firms from their price/cost margins, giving the change in its output implied by Ei  To the extent other firms also charge high prices, the totalWL associated with firm i’s market power exceeds the welfare loss we estimate  Since Harberger observed low values of dpi and yet chose to assume that Ei = 1  dqi was also very small
  • 12.  Assuming interdependence: the WL is calculated by:  dWi = ½ dpi/pi x dqi/qi x piqi (2) Where: dpi/pi = 1/Ei and dqi/qi = Ei x dpi/pi = 1 Therefore: dpi piqi dWi = x (3) pi 2 Then assuming constant cost, we can rewrite (3) in term of profits: ∏i piqi ∏i dWi = x = (4) piqi 2 2
  • 13.  The obvious measure of monopoly profit is the excess of actual profits over long-run (LR) competitive returns.  Economic in equilibrium: the competitive rate is the minimum profit rate compatible with LR survival  Monopoly profit is thus the difference btw actual profits and profits consistent with this minimum rate with:  All would earn profit equal or greater than the minimum  Actual estimateWL under monopoly using perfect competition as the standard of comparison  While Harberger & all subsequent studies: based the monopoly profit estimate on the size of the deviation btw actual profit rates and the mean rate, i.e. an industry whose profit rate was 5% below the mean profit rate was considered to have created as large a WL as an industry whose profits are 5% above the mean; and assumed the degree of monopoly equalized across all firms therefore the estimate of WL is biased downwards.
  • 14.  Previous studies used industry data at a fairly high level of aggregation, including earning negative economic profit firms  Implicitly assumed that the monopoly profits earned by the most profitable firms in the industry are somehow offset those experiencing transitory losses  The estimates of all previous studies through the assumption of a constant Ei across all industries  The profit margin’s appearance as a squared term in the welfare loss formula & further biases the WL estimate downwards!
  • 15.  The previous studies underestimate the social costs of monopoly by failing to recognize the costs involved in attempts to gain & retain monopoly power  Form of investment in excess production capability, excessive ads or R&D activities…  Estimate ofWL therefore underestimate social costs of monopoly in 2 ways: ▪ Understating monopoly rents  understate the distortions in outputs monopoly produces ▪ Failing to include these additional expenditures as part of the costs of monopoly
  • 16.  Three adjustments to measureWL :  Advertising is added to monopoly profit  All of advertising is added to the welfare losses, this takes the extreme view that ads as merely an instrument for secure market power  All of measured, after-tax profits above the competitive cost of capital are used as the estimate of the expenditure incurred by others to obtain control of the monopoly rents
  • 17.  Let C0 be observed costs, including investment- type outlays & P0 observed price that consistent with monopoly firm’s demand schedule D0  Under more inelastic demand schedule assumption, both profits (∏) and welfare loss (L) are much larger  An alternative procedure for calculating WL: estimate Price/cost margins from data on demand elasticity?
  • 18.  Provide two sets of estimate, one based on our assumptions (∆Wk CM) , the other based on Harberger- type assumptions (∆Wk H), both measured at the firm- level, in US & UK respectively  Range of four estimate define as following:  K=1, the one (∆Wk CM) based on interdependence of dpi and dqi, the other (∆Wk H) based on the Harberger methodology  K=2, the same calculations are performed but in calculating dpi, ads expenditure (Ai) is deducted from cost  K=3, we add in Ads as a social cost  K=4, we also add in monopoly profits after-tax as a further element of social cost.At this point, the appropriated profit measure is before tax profit
  • 19.
  • 20.  Sample: companies operating in both intermediate & final goods markets  Assumption of demand schedule for an intermediate represents a derived demand schedule (Marshallian model)  To estimate monopoly profits: using the return rates in stock markets:  Regarded to be fairly close to satisfying the free-entry and – exit requirement of a competitive industry  All existing monopoly rents are fully capitalized at the beginning of the period  Changes in monopoly rents over the period are accurately anticipated  The estimate of the competitive return on capital: ▪ in US :The Fisher- Lorie index of returns (1963-1966): 12% ▪ In UK:The pretax real cost of capital from 1968-69 (Flemming et al.; 1976): 8.15%
  • 21.  The sample of 734 firms on the COMPUSTAT tape in 1963-6 period  The firms are ranked according to the size ofWL as measured by ∆Wk CM  GM lead the list: annual WL over $1.78billion (>1/4 of 1% of average GNP during the period)  Most of the other of the top20 are names expected  6 of 40 largestWL are accounted for by regulated firms ( 3 telephone companies & 3 airlines) in which ads made up all or most of the losses  The obtained estimates ranging btw 4 and 13% of GCPVS. the range from 0.4 and 7% for the Harberger approach
  • 22.
  • 23.  The same basis as the US estimates, contenting with an analysis of the top 103 firms in the UK from the periods 1968/9 and 1970/4, these firms were responsible for roughly one-third of the GNP  Ads expenditure was estimated by aggregating up from the brand level (TV & press)  BP& Shell dominate the table, whichWL associated with BP alone is roughly a quarter of 1% of GNP  The results of periods 1970/4 look much like the 1968/9 despite the rapid inflation in UK in this time  The aggregate estimates ofWL for ∆Wk CM range btw 3.9 and 7.2% of GCP for the 1968/9 periodVS. Harberger approach estimates ofWL btw 0.2 and 3% of GCP
  • 24.
  • 25.  The evidence suggest that significant welfare loss due to monopoly power  Any attempts to take large amount of investment-type expenditures beyond the ads and adjust demand elasticity accordingly, while maintaining the assumption that companies do posses and exercise market power will lead to larger estimates ofWL.  The implications of potential important policies, ex: antitrust towards to most significant contributors to these losses
  • 26.  Tirole, J., (1988) : TheTheory of Industrial Organisation, MIT Press, Cambridge (MA).  Krueger,A. (1972) : "The Political Economy of Rent Seeking" in American Economic Review.  Posner, R., (1975) : "The Social Costs of Monopoly and Regulation" Journal of Political Economy.  Alan Dunne, Rent Seeking and the Social Costs of Monopoly, visit http://www.maths.tcd.ie/local/JUNK/econrev/ser/ht ml/rent.html on 26Nov, 2012  Monopoly, visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopoly#Sources_of _monopoly_power on 26Nov, 2012
  • 27. THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR YOUR ATTENTION! ANY COMMENTS & QUESTIONS PLEASE?