A monopoly, unlike a perfect competitor, has total control in its market because it is the single producer. Why, then, must a single-price monopoly decrease its price if it wants to increase its output?
What will be an ideal response?
Because the monopoly does control the market, the monopoly sets the price at the maximum level that sells all the output the monopoly produces. This maximum price is determined from the demand for the product. The downward sloping market demand curve shows that the only way to increase the quantity consumers will buy is to lower the price. As a result, when a monopoly wants to produce more output, demanders will not buy the additional output at the initial price. As the downward sloping demand curve indicates, in order to sell the extra production, the monopolist must lower its price.
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When U.S. net exports rise, which increases the aggregate quantity of goods and services demanded, the dollar must have
a) depreciated b) reciprocated. c) equivocated. d) appreciated.
When resources are used efficiently, you can produce more of one good, ceteris paribus, only by: a. printing more money
b. charging a lower price for output. c. charging a higher price for output. d. producing less of another good.