A company cannot endlessly buy out competitors and remain profitable. When a competitor sees a great potential for profits, they would be unlikely to sell for cheap. And even if they do, soon after another competitor will pop up. It is impossible for a business to keep all competition out of the market in absence of government regulation, apart from them being more efficient than any potential competitor, which is a good thing for consumers.
1/15/2010 10:31:43 AM
The "monopoly" is assumed to have infinite money, allowing it to keep prices dirt cheap for extended periods of time, taking a loss but driving out competitors, and then still have money left over to buy out every competitor in the entire world that pops up.[Edited on January 15, 2010 at 10:34 AM. Reason : ]
1/15/2010 10:34:25 AM
Standard Oil strong-armed suppliers/freight-forwarders into either ceasing business with competition or solvency. They controlled 80+% of the national market, and 100% of the market in many regions. That's the very definition of a monopoly. There were NO avenues for competition that were outside Standard Oil's control.
1/15/2010 10:36:02 AM
^^^ The monopoly doesn't have to buy anything. It simply needs to invite the new competition into the racket, which is inherently more profitable.[Edited on January 15, 2010 at 10:38 AM. Reason : i'm bad at carrots]
1/15/2010 10:38:01 AM
Did you read the article I posted? Here, I'll help you out:
1/15/2010 10:38:31 AM
Obviously not. Another section:
1/15/2010 10:40:14 AM
1/15/2010 10:48:32 AM
I don't read articles unless I want to find the context for a quote. I don't make people's arguments for them.OK, if we're going to argue about historicity, I'm going to just say I trust the citations on wikipedia slightly more than your article. According to the aforementioned, Standard oil controlled 91% of the market shortly before the anti-trust suit. During the anti-trust suit, market share fell dramatically as Standard shed it's holdings.Now, I will grant that this monopoly never reached the kind of control I am proposing, and no totally private entity has. However, your position is equally speculative because a modern example of a wholly free market doesn't exist (to my knowledge).[Edited on January 15, 2010 at 11:00 AM. Reason : dur]
1/15/2010 10:59:14 AM
1/15/2010 11:48:20 AM
d357r0y3r you have a very good textbook understanding of economics and can apply the academic fundamentals, but unfortunately lack the true market experience to understand the innate failures in your arguments when they are confronted with reality.
1/15/2010 1:55:55 PM
Wal-mart was just an example I used for an incredibly large company that regularly branches, successfully, into diverse markets. Retail sales, by its nature, is a very competiton-friendly market. I'm not worried about a monopoly on retail sales.Cat, you should speculate about the effects of Wal-Mart involving itself in a market less inclined towards competition - like roads or the power grid. In a free market, infrastructre and utilities are privately-owned entities.
1/15/2010 2:25:30 PM
i think ive learned more from mises.org than any book i was forced to read. thanks.
1/15/2010 3:47:28 PM
1/26/2010 1:58:59 PM
haha, that video is amazing.
1/26/2010 2:07:52 PM
watched it twice in a row.
1/26/2010 2:45:15 PM
okay i have to admit- good video
1/26/2010 4:25:43 PM