Here's a picture that might help.I stole it from this site http://ingrimayne.com/econ/Monopoly/Monopoly.html but I didn't read it thoroughly, so I can't tell you that its good or bad. The economic idea of efficiency is when the marginal cost = marginal benefit.Marginal benefit is given by the demand curve. So it is when MC = Demand that the utility is maximized in the economy. Regardless of profit, if it costs less than it is seen as beneficial to produce one more unit of something, it should be produced.In competition, this is not a problem, because the MR curve faced by firms IS the demand curve as well. So they produce where MR = MC, which happens to be where MC = MB (the efficient output). Instead, a monopolist faces a MR curve that has a greater slope than the Demand curve. Thus, he operates at profit maximization (MC = MR) which is an inefficient quantity. As you can see, it is more beneficial to the next purchaser of this good than it costs the monopolist to produce the good, but he won't produce it.
10/18/2006 7:19:29 AM
10/18/2006 9:12:20 AM
^ Right on. None of us capitalists are advocates of anarchy. We believe that the economy should have the least amount of government interference as possible and when it does interfere, it should do so to protect the rights of others.About efficiency: Lonesnark is right. No matter if there is 1 firm or 1000000 firms, the incentive in a capitalist system is to make as much profit as possible and the way to achieve that is to either 1) reduce costs, 2) increase price, 3) both.A monopoly will still try to make the widget at the lowest price possible and sell for the highest price possible (what every firm does).That's where efficiency is created, by maximizing profits (MC=MR).
10/18/2006 9:19:51 AM
I think bgmims just explained the basic economic concept of why monopolies are ineffcient in terms that anyone can get, so I hope you guys read through that.
10/18/2006 11:30:04 AM
Kris, there are two types of efficiency here, we are each using a different meaning of the word. Our usage is resource efficiency. A monopoly will seek to minimize waste when it comes to inputs, therefore maximizing resource efficiency by battling to keep costs down. Your usage is utility efficiency, I guess. At the lower price of a competitive marketplace society will consume more of the good and therefore gain more utility from the market. But I find it difficult to call this a form of efficiency since it increased consumption by increasing inputs by the same amount.
10/18/2006 1:36:39 PM
10/18/2006 2:29:45 PM
Efficiency is still calculated by dividing outputs by inputs, right? Maybe it is just that I am an Engineer and Kris is trying make himself look smart, but I suspect a word should not radically change meaning just because the subject has changed, especially when it doesn't have to.
10/18/2006 2:57:30 PM
^ when at fault, redefine.
10/18/2006 3:03:00 PM
^ It doesn't matter anyway, we now know what he means to say and I trust he has figured out what we are talking about.
10/18/2006 3:09:11 PM
10/18/2006 3:54:26 PM
10/18/2006 4:00:52 PM
whats funny is that after about two pages you still don't understand monopoly pricing or economic efficiency
10/18/2006 4:04:36 PM
10/18/2006 6:52:52 PM
ok all of you need to learn something about communism. You an sit here and say it would work in any nation but you would have to define what work meant but the main reason the "perfect on paper" economic system cannot survive is that people are corrupt and the leaders or overseers of the system would take advantage of their position and it would either become a dictatorship or the people would revolt.
10/18/2006 8:49:34 PM
What are you talking about?There's only one of us that thinks communism might work well and that's Kris. And even he thinks you have to turn human beings into machines (my paraphrase, no need to defend that Kris) before it would work well. The truth is, not even one of us thinks communism would work in the current state of the world.
10/18/2006 9:38:44 PM
10/18/2006 10:39:35 PM
10/19/2006 1:00:12 AM
10/19/2006 7:29:32 AM
^ Why? Because I suspected Kris was trying to play fast and lose with definitions? For that you condemn me? Cheeze wiz.
10/19/2006 11:43:09 PM
10/20/2006 12:11:42 AM
10/20/2006 1:36:56 AM
Firms may or may not intend to become monopolies, firms will always intend to make money. Firms do not enter industries to make monopolies. Monopolies do not encourage competition.These, like the efficiency term, are basic economic concepts, and they aren't debated. You're simply wrong on this.
10/20/2006 11:41:21 AM
As usual, Kris, you just can't follow simple logic. While most firms do not believe becoming a monopoly is likely it doesn't affect the desire to do so. Why would a firm that believed it was possible to become a monopoly not seek to do so? It has already been established that doing so would make more money, and that firms seek to make money, so why do you believe that a firm that could would not seek to make money by becoming a monopoly?
10/20/2006 11:54:23 AM
10/20/2006 12:20:37 PM
10/20/2006 1:18:48 PM
No it would not work.
10/20/2006 1:48:36 PM
i was in class today thinking and this could be started so easily by simply adjusting the tax brackets to put everybody in a smaller range of incomes and slightly decrease that range each year to progress into communism
10/25/2006 5:46:43 PM
so easy!nevermind the fact that your economy goes to fucking shit in the meantime - it will be EASY!!! raising taxes is easy because some goddamn moron college student said so.but just FYI, i would never stay in my highly stressful and volatile industry if my net income approached that of a used bookstore employee. i know that falls on deaf ears.
10/25/2006 9:39:26 PM
10/25/2006 10:13:19 PM
10/25/2006 11:13:18 PM
10/25/2006 11:58:40 PM
10/26/2006 12:32:39 AM
I can see you simply cannot fill in any holes. I'm going to have to take you step by step down what should be a simple train of thought.
10/26/2006 10:13:58 AM
10/26/2006 10:55:05 AM
10/26/2006 11:15:27 AM
10/26/2006 11:49:40 AM
10/26/2006 12:05:31 PM
10/26/2006 12:14:50 PM
Well, historically speaking, it did exist until the ICC started setting rates, in effect introducing price caps, which eliminated the incentive to compete that came from monopoly pricing, so competition in these markets ceased.
10/26/2006 12:20:28 PM
So can you agree with me that, without government, capitalism is ineffective in maintaining competition in markets with large returns to scale?
10/26/2006 2:17:55 PM
Kris, let me restate my sentence for you:Well, historically speaking, competition did exist until the ICC started setting rates, in effect introducing price caps, which eliminated the incentive to compete that came from monopoly pricing, so competition in these markets ceased.My point in all this was that competition was prevalent to the extreme before the government stepped in. Competition was the enemy, it was viewed as ruinous. But it was only ruinous for business, not society. Society benefitted from lower prices, companies suffered from ruinous competition. The NRA (FDR's National Recovery Administration) spent most of its time going after firms for setting prices too low, not too high. The National Aeronautics Board (NAB) which shut down in the 1980s was even more anti-competitive (it spent 95% of its time chasing down prices that were too low). They did this for good reason. If you introduce a maximum price, then monopoly rewards vanish, so the incentive to compete vanishes, so you must make sure existing competitors stick around because you will never get new ones, so you also need a price floor. So, in order to abolish monopoly government must also abolish competition, as it did. As such, if you are going to have competition then you should also allow monopolies.
10/26/2006 2:43:41 PM
10/26/2006 3:23:14 PM
not gonna happen, too much greed too much corruption too much competitionthese things can't be 'conditioned' away.... they are base forces of evolution in animals (competition and greed at least)so, it will never happen successfully among a significantly large group, much less in the US or an entire country....
10/26/2006 3:34:57 PM
10/26/2006 6:59:24 PM
10/26/2006 10:23:03 PM
10/26/2006 11:11:12 PM
10/27/2006 2:03:12 PM
Obviously you since it is your contention that "Monopolies do not encourage competition" when I have demonstrated that under common circumstances they do. "Firms do not enter industries to make monopolies."All in all, I said awhile back that this mechanism was only important in certain industries (high fixed costs, little to no variable costs), so it is quite fair to ask "Who gives a shit." But it seemed like you were endlessly fascinated by this mechanism of capitalism (a whole page), so I gave you a tour.
10/27/2006 5:17:16 PM
To even see a thread like this saddens me. To even consider communism...even in fun..just goes to show how little the understanding is on communism is this country.My wife was born in Kaliningrad, Russia. The wall fell when she was 10.She had an up-close and personal look at communism.Let's talk about some of the better memories of her childhood.One of the great pleasures was getting some chewing gum.I am not talking all the time...maybe 3 times when she was a kid.It was 3 Piggys gum. It was such a treat that she still remembers the name of the gum. It was the only kind of gum that they had in Russia.Her father was a sailor. And when he was in ports in Africa, the sailors would get little containers of yogurt. And as we know, containers of yogurt has the little foil tops you peel off. Her father would go around and collect these foil tops (that had pictures of the fruit that was inside) to give to his children.These were treasures. Other kids were so envious.One last example of the fonder memories.One of my wife's grandmothers was a manager in a Vodka factory. This was a VERY good job.Vodka could be traded for almost anything. And this meant that there was fresh fruit at New Years. (Christmas was not celebrated.)You may be asking why I would be talking about fonder memories of my wife's childhood to explain communism. I want you to look at what are considered treasures. Look at what the high points are. How many here would consider a life like that as sub-par? Yet this was considered upper middle class in Russia back then.But there are also darker memories too. I will not beat you down with them. I will only name a couple.My wife's mother became a Christain (Orthodox)She would hide in her own home, in the closet, to read the Bible because to be caught with one meant death for the family.This was not an idle threat either.My wife's other grandmother was carried out of her home one night by the police. This was over 20 years ago.They have never heard from her again. Nobody in her family knows why she was taken by the police and nobody knows exactly what happened to her.And nobody dared to ask. This could mean them being carried away too.These are my wife's memories. They are not at all uncommon from Communism.And for any leftest whacko out there...do not even insult me with any ignorant rant about Bush doing these things.If you really felt that way, you would not DARE post it because you would be terrified of being taken away one night by the police to never be seen again.So who here still wants to entertain this as a possible way of life for yourself?
10/28/2006 1:23:48 AM
10/28/2006 1:31:52 AM