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Monopoly
Barriers to Entry: Reasons for Monopolies to Exist
Economics Textbooks Boundless Economics Monopoly Barriers to Entry: Reasons for Monopolies to Exist
Economics Textbooks Boundless Economics Monopoly
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Economics Textbooks
Economics
Concept Version 6
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Economies of Scale and Network Externalities

Economies of scale and network externalities discourage potential competitors from entering a market.

Learning Objective

  • Define Economies of Scale., Explain why economies of scale are desirable for monopolies


Key Points

    • Economies of scale are cost advantages that large firms gain because of their size.
    • Natural monopolies arise as a result of economies of scale. Natural monopolies have overwhelming cost advantages over potential competitors.
    • Network effects occur when the value of a good or service increases because many other people are using it. This makes competing goods or services with lower levels of adoption unattractive to new customers.

Terms

  • economies of scale

    The characteristics of a production process in which an increase in the scale of the firm causes a decrease in the long run average cost of each unit.

  • Network externalities

    Are evident when the value of a product or service is dependent on the number of other people using it.

  • Natural monopoly

    Occurs when a firm is able to serve the entire market demand at a lower cost than any combination of two or more smaller, more specialized firms.


Full Text

Economies of scale and network externalities are two types of barrier to entry. They discourage potential competitors from entering a market, and thus contribute to the monopolistic power of some firms.

Economies of scale are cost advantages that large firms obtain due to their size.They occur because the cost per unit of output decreases with increasing scale, as fixed costs are spread over more units of output . Economies of scale are also gained through bulk-buying of materials with long-term contracts, the increased specialization of managers, ability to obtain lower interest rates when borrowing from banks, access to a greater range of financial instruments, and spreading the cost of marketing over a greater range of output. Each of these factors contributes to reductions in the long-run average cost of production.

Economies of Scale

Large firms obtain economies of scale in part because fixed costs are spread over more units of output.

A natural monopoly arises as a result of economies of scale. For natural monopolies, the average total cost declines continually as output increases, giving the monopolist an overwhelming cost advantage over potential competitors. It becomes most efficient for production to be concentrated in a single firm.

Network externalities (also called network effects) occur when the value of a good or service increases as a result of many people using it. Because of network effects, certain goods or services that are adopted widely will appear to be much more attractive to new customers than competing goods or services. This is evident in online social networks. Social networks with the largest memberships are more attractive to new users, because new users know that their friends or colleagues are more likely to be on these networks. It is also evident with certain software programs. For example, most people use Microsoft word processing software. While other word processing programs may be available, an individual would risk running into compatibility problems when sending files to people or machines using the mainstream software. This makes it difficult for new companies to enter the market and to gain market share.

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