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MONOPOLY
 The Word Monopoly is a Latin Term. ‘Mono’ means
 Single and ‘Poly’ means Seller.

 Monopoly is a form of Market Organization in which
 there is only One Seller of the Commodity.

 There are No Close Substitutes for the Commodity
 sold by the Seller.
Features Of Monopoly
1. Single Person or a Firm.

2. No Close Substitutes.

3. Large Number of Buyers.

4. Price Maker.

5. Downward Sloping Demand Curve.
Types Of Monopoly Practices
1. Perfect Monopoly
2. Imperfect Monopoly
3. Private Monopoly
4. Public Monopoly
5. Simple Monopoly
6. Discriminating Monopoly
7. Legal Monopoly
8. Natural Monopoly
9. Technological Monopoly
10. Joint Monopoly
Perfect Monopoly
 It is also called as absolute monopoly.


 In this case, there is only a single seller of product
  having no close substitute; not even remote one.

 There is absolutely zero level of competition.


 Such monopoly is practically very rare.

 Bill Gates played Perfect Monopoly in US for MS
 Word.
Imperfect Monopoly
 It is also called as relative monopoly.


 It refers to a single seller market having no close
  substitute.

 It means in this market, a product may have a
  remote substitute. So, there is fear of competition
 to some extent.

 e.g. Vodafone is having competition from fixed
 landline phone service industry BSNL.
Private Monopoly
 When production is owned, controlled and
  managed by the individual, or private body or
  private organization, it is called private monopoly.

 e.g. Tata, Reliance, Bajaj groups in India.


 Such type of monopoly is profit oriented.
Public Monopoly
 A Government monopoly (or Public monopoly) is
  a form of coercive monopoly in which a
  government agency or government corporation is
  the sole provider of a particular good or service
  and competition is prohibited by law.

 It is a Monopoly created by the Government.


 the German Public Train System is entirely
  government run; there are no private competitors.
 That is a true Public monopoly.
Simple Monopoly
 It is also called Single-Price Monopoly.


 The simple monopolist abides by the “law of one
  price.” Everyone pays the same market price for all
  units purchased.

 Simple monopoly firm charges a uniform price or
 single price to all the customers.

 He operates in a single market.
Discriminating Monopoly
 Such a monopoly firm charges different price to
  different customers for the same product. It
  prevails in more than one market.

 An example is an airline monopoly.


 Airlines frequently sell various seats at various
  prices based on demand.
Legal Monopoly
 It is a monopoly that is protected by law from
 competition.

 A government-regulated firm that is legally
 entitled to be the only company offering a
 particular service in a particular area.

 For example, AT&T operated as a legal monopoly
  until 1982 because it was supposed to have cheap
  and reliable service for everyone.
Natural Monopoly
 A type of monopoly that exists as a result of the
  high fixed or start-up costs of operating a business
  in a particular industry.

 Government often regulate certain natural
  monopolies to ensure that consumers get a fair
  deal.

 The utilities industry is a good example of a
  natural monopoly—Gas , Water, Power.
Technological Monopoly
 It emerges as a result of economies of large scale
  production, use of capital goods, new production
  methods, etc.

 E.g. engineering goods industry, automobile
  industry, software industry, etc.

 Internet Explorer was the only browser available to
  browse the web between 1995-2000.
Joint Monopoly
 If two or more business firms acquire monopoly
  position through
  amalgamation, cartels, syndicates, etc, then it
  becomes joint monopoly.

 e.g. Actually, pizza making firm and burger
  making firm are competitors of each other in fast
 food industry. But when they combine their
 business, that leads to reduction in competition.
 So they can enjoy monopoly power in market.
Quick Summary

Perfect        Discriminating
Imperfect      Legal
Private        Natural
Public         Technological
Simple         Joint
Different types of monopoly practices

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Different types of monopoly practices

  • 1.
  • 2. MONOPOLY  The Word Monopoly is a Latin Term. ‘Mono’ means Single and ‘Poly’ means Seller.  Monopoly is a form of Market Organization in which there is only One Seller of the Commodity.  There are No Close Substitutes for the Commodity sold by the Seller.
  • 3. Features Of Monopoly 1. Single Person or a Firm. 2. No Close Substitutes. 3. Large Number of Buyers. 4. Price Maker. 5. Downward Sloping Demand Curve.
  • 4. Types Of Monopoly Practices 1. Perfect Monopoly 2. Imperfect Monopoly 3. Private Monopoly 4. Public Monopoly 5. Simple Monopoly 6. Discriminating Monopoly 7. Legal Monopoly 8. Natural Monopoly 9. Technological Monopoly 10. Joint Monopoly
  • 5. Perfect Monopoly  It is also called as absolute monopoly.  In this case, there is only a single seller of product having no close substitute; not even remote one.  There is absolutely zero level of competition.  Such monopoly is practically very rare.  Bill Gates played Perfect Monopoly in US for MS Word.
  • 6. Imperfect Monopoly  It is also called as relative monopoly.  It refers to a single seller market having no close substitute.  It means in this market, a product may have a remote substitute. So, there is fear of competition to some extent.  e.g. Vodafone is having competition from fixed landline phone service industry BSNL.
  • 7. Private Monopoly  When production is owned, controlled and managed by the individual, or private body or private organization, it is called private monopoly.  e.g. Tata, Reliance, Bajaj groups in India.  Such type of monopoly is profit oriented.
  • 8. Public Monopoly  A Government monopoly (or Public monopoly) is a form of coercive monopoly in which a government agency or government corporation is the sole provider of a particular good or service and competition is prohibited by law.  It is a Monopoly created by the Government.  the German Public Train System is entirely government run; there are no private competitors. That is a true Public monopoly.
  • 9. Simple Monopoly  It is also called Single-Price Monopoly.  The simple monopolist abides by the “law of one price.” Everyone pays the same market price for all units purchased.  Simple monopoly firm charges a uniform price or single price to all the customers.  He operates in a single market.
  • 10. Discriminating Monopoly  Such a monopoly firm charges different price to different customers for the same product. It prevails in more than one market.  An example is an airline monopoly.  Airlines frequently sell various seats at various prices based on demand.
  • 11. Legal Monopoly  It is a monopoly that is protected by law from competition.  A government-regulated firm that is legally entitled to be the only company offering a particular service in a particular area.  For example, AT&T operated as a legal monopoly until 1982 because it was supposed to have cheap and reliable service for everyone.
  • 12. Natural Monopoly  A type of monopoly that exists as a result of the high fixed or start-up costs of operating a business in a particular industry.  Government often regulate certain natural monopolies to ensure that consumers get a fair deal.  The utilities industry is a good example of a natural monopoly—Gas , Water, Power.
  • 13. Technological Monopoly  It emerges as a result of economies of large scale production, use of capital goods, new production methods, etc.  E.g. engineering goods industry, automobile industry, software industry, etc.  Internet Explorer was the only browser available to browse the web between 1995-2000.
  • 14. Joint Monopoly  If two or more business firms acquire monopoly position through amalgamation, cartels, syndicates, etc, then it becomes joint monopoly.  e.g. Actually, pizza making firm and burger making firm are competitors of each other in fast food industry. But when they combine their business, that leads to reduction in competition. So they can enjoy monopoly power in market.
  • 15. Quick Summary Perfect Discriminating Imperfect Legal Private Natural Public Technological Simple Joint