Oligopoly
Oligopoly Aspects
Monopoly
Monopoly Aspects
100

A market structure dominated by a small number of large, powerful firms that differentiated products.

100

An illegal agreement among firms to fix prices or restrict output to drive up profits.

100

The market structure characterized by a single seller, a unique product, and no close substitutes.

100

Selling the same good to different consumers at different prices based on their willingness to pay.

200

Where one firm's choices impact its competitors.

200

The framework used to analyze interactions between players who must consider their rivals' choices.

200

A monopoly that emerges because a single firm can produce goods at a lower cost than multiple smaller firms.

200

Laws designed to prevent monopolies and protect competitive markets.

300

The simplest form of an oligopoly.

300

A situation in game theory where both players choose their optimal strategy given the strategy chosen by the other.

300

The hurdles that protect a monopoly from new competitors.

300

A government-imposed limit on the price a monopoly can charge.

400

A model explaining why oligopoly prices remain stable, predicting that rivals will match price cuts but ignore price increases.

400

A scenario showing why two firms might fail to cooperate, even when cooperation is in their best interest.

400

The loss of economic efficiency that happens when a monopoly restricts output to raise prices.

400

A price point where a monopoly earns zero economic profit because the P=ATC.

500

A metric calculated by adding the market shares of the top four firms.

500

A strategy that yields the highest payoff for a firm, regardless of its competitor's strategy.

500

A firm's ability to raise the market price of a good or service above marginal cost without losing all its customers.

500

The point at which a monopoly achieves allocative efficiency.

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