Imperfect Markets
Monopoly
Price Discrimination
Monopolistic Competition
Oligopoly
100

These are the 3 kinds of imperfect markets

What are monopolies, monopolistic competition, and oligopolies?

100

This is why monopolies are not allocatively efficient

What is that they set price higher than marginal cost?

100

This is the definition of price discrimination

What is it when producers charge different consumers different prices for the same product?
100

This is a characteristic of monopolistic competition

What is low barriers to entry, many firms, differentiated products, lots of advertising, inefficiency?

100

This is a characteristic of oligopolies. 

What are a few large firms, mutual interdependence, control over price, high barriers to entry, inefficiency?

200

This is a type of imperfectly competitive market that has many firms with low barriers to entry.

What is monopolistic competition.

200
These are examples of 2 barriers to entry that exist in monopolistic markets.

What are high start-up costs, patents, access to raw materials, or geography?

200

This is the definition of perfect price discrimination

What is when producers charge the maximum price a consumer would be willing to pay for a good.

200

This is why firms use advertising in monopolistically competitive markets. 

What is to make demand more inelastic OR increase demand?

200

This is why collusion among cartels is typically ineffective.

What is because firms have incentive to cheat on agreements?

300

This is what imperfectly competitive firms have to do to sell more units of output.

What is lower their prices?


300

This is true of the average total cost curve of a natural monopoly.

What is that it is always decreasing?
300

These are the type of consumers who are charged higher prices under a price-discriminating firm (Hint: The answer will be those with inelastic demand or those with elastic demand).

What are consumers with more inelastic demand.

300

This is true of economic profit in the long-run for monopolistically competitive firms.

What is that economic profit equals 0

300

This is what would happen if both firms colluded in the payoff matrix below:


What is both firms don't develop technology?

400

This is the relationship between demand and marginal revenue in imperfectly competitive markets. 

What is that Demand>Marginal Revenue?

400

This is a graph of a monopoly earning a loss.


400

This is what happens to consumer surplus with a perfectly price discriminating firm.

What is that it shrinks to 0?

400

This is why economic profit equals 0 in the long-run for perfectly competitive markets.

What is because firms can enter or exit the market, impacting the demand curve?

400

This is the dominant strategy for firm 1 in the payoff matrix below.


What is developing technology?


500

This is a graph of an imperfectly competitive firm (specifically a monopoly or monopolistically competitive firm in the short run) earning economic profit. 

What is: 


500

This is a monopoly graph with deadweight loss & consumer surplus shaded in. 


500

This is what a perfectly price discriminating firm graph looks like with marginal cost, marginal revenue, and demand labeled.

What is:


500

This is what a graph for a monopolistically competitive firm looks like in the long-run with D, MR, P, Q, and ATC labeled.

What is:


500

This is the Nash Equilibrium in the payoff matrix below.


What is Firm 1 Developing Technology & Firm 2 Developing Technology?