Basic concepts
Monopoly power
Monopsony and labor markets
Comparison
100

This market structure has many buyers and many sellers.

Perfect competition 

100

A monopolist faces this type of demand curve

downward-sloping demand curve


100

A monopsony has market power over this group.

workers

100

Both monopoly and monopsony are examples of this.

market power

200

A monopoly exists when there is only one ____ in a market.

seller

200

This barrier to entry comes from owning a critical resource.

resource ownership


200

In a monopsony, wages tend to be ____ compared to competitive markets.

lower

200

A monopoly controls price in the output market, while a monopsony controls price in this market.

the input or labor market


300

A monopsony exists when there is only one ____ in a market.

buyer

300

When a monopolist charges different prices to different consumers, it is called this.

price discrimination

300

This curve represents the cost of hiring one more worker in a monopsony.

marginal factor cost (MFC) curve


300

Monopolies restrict output, while monopsonies restrict this.

employment

400

This type of firm is a price maker rather than a price taker.

monopoly

400

This rule describes how a monopolist maximizes profit.

MR = MC

400

A monopsonist hires workers where this equals marginal revenue product.

marginal factor cost

400

Both structures can lead to this economic inefficiency.

deadweight loss

500

This market structure is often associated with labor markets where one firm dominates hiring.

monopsony

500

This loss of total surplus occurs when monopolies restrict output.

deadweight loss

500

This policy can sometimes increase employment in a monopsony labor market.

a minimum wage


500

This key difference separates monopoly from monopsony.

whether the firm is a buyer or a seller