मराठी

Determination of Price and Equilibrium Under Monopoly - Marginal Revenue and Marginal Cost Approach

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Topics

Estimated time: 9 minutes
  • Short-Run Equilibrium (Fixed Plant)
  • Long-Run Equilibrium (Choose Best Plant)
  • Key Points: Marginal Revenue and Marginal Cost Approach
CISCE: Class 12

Short-Run Equilibrium (Fixed Plant)

Monopoly picks output where MR=MC; price from demand curve. Three cases:

Case AR vs AC Profit/Loss Real-Life (India) Diagram Note
Supernormal Profit AR > AC Yes (shaded rectangle P1A1B1C1) Jio entry 2016: Low prices, high margins MR=MC at Q1; AR high
Normal Profit AR = AC Zero (tangent) Local cable TV break-even AR touches AC at Q2
Loss (but operate) AC > AR > AVC Covered by fixed costs Struggling sugar mills AR above AVC at Q3 
CISCE: Class 12

Long-Run Equilibrium (Choose Best Plant)

  • Monopoly selects plant where SAC touches LAC at equilibrium output (tangent at A2).
  • Profits larger: P2A2B2C2 > short-run P1A1B1C1 (optimal scale).
  • Example: Reliance picks factory size for max telecom profits—no new rivals due to barriers.
  • Key: LAC envelope of SAC curves; downward then U-shaped.
CISCE: Class 12

Key Points: Marginal Revenue and Marginal Cost Approach

  • Monopoly equilibrium occurs when MR = MC and MC cuts MR from below.
  • In the short run, a monopolist may earn super-normal profit, normal profit, or incur losses.
  • In the long run, entry is restricted, so super-normal profits may continue.
  • Equilibrium price and output are fixed where MR = LMC.

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