Deck 12: Between Competition and Monopoly

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Question
Monopolistic competition differs from perfect competition only in the number of firms participating in the market.
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Question
Society definitely benefits by reducing the number of monopolistically competitive firms.
Question
The demand curve for a monopolistic competitor has a negative slope.
Question
Monopolistically competitive firms can earn large profits in the long run.
Question
A monopolistic competitor faces a horizontal demand curve.
Question
In the long run, zero economic profit exists in monopolistic competition and perfect competition.
Question
The demand curve for a monopolistic competitor is likely to be flatter than that of a monopolist.
Question
The entry of new firms into a monopolistically competitive industry will cause the long-run equilibrium price to rise.
Question
In the long run, a monopolistically competitive firm earns small economic profits.
Question
Most economic activity in the United States is carried out by monopolies.
Question
The cost-revenue diagrams for a monopolist and a monopolistic competitor are similar except that the demand curve for the monopolistic competitor is flatter.
Question
In the long run, a monopolistically competitive firm's demand curve must be tangent to its average cost curve.
Question
Monopolistic competition is a market structure characterized by many small firms selling a homogeneous product.
Question
Monopolistic competition has at least one similarity to perfect competition: firms are free to enter and leave the industry.
Question
For the monopolistic competitor, MR = P.
Question
The demand curve for a monopolistic competitor is likely to be steeper than that of a monopolist.
Question
A monopolistic competitor can expect to earn an economic profit in the long run.
Question
Monopolistically competitive markets feature high barriers to entry.
Question
Monopolistically competitive markets feature heterogeneous products.
Question
Under monopolistic competition, profits cannot persist because new firms will be attracted to the market.
Question
The key difference between oligopoly and other market structures is the interdependence among producers.
Question
Society benefits from monopolistic competition because the firms are allocatively efficient.
Question
Oligopolists use advertising as a way of differentiating their products.
Question
An oligopoly is a market structure in which a few large firms dominate the sale of a single product.
Question
Oligopolistic firms never collude because they have almost no incentive to do so.
Question
An oligopolist cares very much about what other firms in her industry are doing.
Question
An oligopoly can be characterized by production of either identical goods or different goods.
Question
The excess capacity theorem states that society would clearly benefit from a reduction in the number of monopolistic competitors.
Question
The short-run equilibrium of the firm under monopolistic competition has excess capacity.
Question
Average cost is higher with a monopolistically competitive firm than with a perfectly competitive firm.
Question
Oligopolists seldom change prices, because they don't like change.
Question
Advertising never makes sense for an oligopolistic firm.
Question
When comparing industries, a monopolistically competitive industry is less competitive than an oligopoly.
Question
Oligopolists behave independently of each other.
Question
An oligopoly is a market in which at least some firms are large enough to influence market price.
Question
Oligopolies are difficult to analyze because of the interdependent nature of management decisions.
Question
An oligopoly is a market dominated by a few sellers.
Question
Oligopolists almost always cooperate in making price and output decisions.
Question
In the long run, a monopolistically competitive firm produces at minimum average cost.
Question
Excess capacity and inefficiency result under monopolistic competition.
Question
Price leadership is an example of explicit collusion by oligopolies.
Question
Cartels provide uniform management, but none of the advantages of economies of scale.
Question
Price leadership works only if there is a single, dominant firm in the oligopoly.
Question
The kinked demand curve model is based on the assumption that rival firms will match a price cut but ignore a price increase.
Question
One of the most famous cartels is OPEC.
Question
The kinked demand curve model explains pricing in monopoly markets.
Question
Economists place cartels among the least-desirable forms of market organization.
Question
The kinked demand curve is an explanation of sticky prices.
Question
Some oligopolies may try to maximize sales revenue rather than maximize profits.
Question
To maximize sales revenue, an oligopoly will expand output until the price is zero.
Question
Game theory is based on the idea that each participant makes decisions based on how she believes the competition will react.
Question
Sales maximization and profit maximization are essentially equivalent.
Question
Firms that maximize sales always produce more than profit-maximizing firms.
Question
A cartel is a group of sellers of a single product who have joined together in order to enjoy the advantages of perfect competition.
Question
To maximize sales revenue, an oligopolist will expand output until the marginal revenue curve cuts the horizontal axis.
Question
An oligopoly firm with a differentiated product will generally earn the largest profits without advertising.
Question
An oligopolist who sets the price for the industry is a price leader.
Question
Price leadership may sometimes be an example of covert collusive behavior by oligopolies.
Question
Sticky prices are a direct result of the kinked demand curve.
Question
Game theory may be used to solve problems of interdependent decision making by large firms.
Question
An oligopoly will always use game theory to maximize sales rather than profits.
Question
A dominant strategy is one that is best for one player regardless of the strategy chosen by the other player.
Question
All players have dominant strategies.
Question
A duopoly is a form of oligopoly with two firms.
Question
A monopolistically competitive firm

A)tries to differentiate its product from competitors' products.
B)faces a perfectly elastic demand curve for its product.
C)has more monopoly power in the long run than does a perfectly competitive firm.
D)is always a retail establishment.
Question
A dominant strategy is one that gives a player in a game a bigger payoff than the other player receives.
Question
A perfectly contestable market is one in which there are excessive costs to entry and exit.
Question
Identify the market structure characterized by many small firms selling somewhat different products.

A)Monopoly
B)Monopolistic competition
C)Perfect competition
D)Duopoly
Question
Repeated games can lead to tacit collusion.
Question
The maximin criterion seeks to minimize the maximum payoffs in order to win.
Question
The models of perfect competition and monopoly are the most realistic.
Question
A perfectly contestable market is one which a firm can enter and exit without losing its investment.
Question
Under perfect competition and monopolistic competition, profits are zero in long-run equilibrium.
Question
Which of the following is not a requirement for the existence of monopolistic competition in a market?

A)numerous small sellers
B)full information about the market among buyers and sellers
C)product homogeneity
D)freedom of entry into the market
Question
An oligopoly using a maximin strategy must believe that the losses from underestimating a competitor's skill are worse than those from overestimating it.
Question
Firms in a perfectly contestable market will earn higher profits than firms in markets that are not perfectly contestable.
Question
To understand most of today's economic activity in the U.S.economy, we should look at which of the following models?

A)perfect competition and pure monopoly
B)perfect competition and oligopoly
C)oligopoly and monopolistic competition
D)monopolistic competition and monopoly
Question
Monopolies can misallocate resources by restricting output in an attempt to raise prices and profits.
Question
Perfect competition and pure monopoly are concepts useful primarily for realistic application.
Question
International trade can be correctly considered as an example of a zero-sum game.
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Deck 12: Between Competition and Monopoly
1
Monopolistic competition differs from perfect competition only in the number of firms participating in the market.
False
2
Society definitely benefits by reducing the number of monopolistically competitive firms.
False
3
The demand curve for a monopolistic competitor has a negative slope.
True
4
Monopolistically competitive firms can earn large profits in the long run.
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5
A monopolistic competitor faces a horizontal demand curve.
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6
In the long run, zero economic profit exists in monopolistic competition and perfect competition.
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7
The demand curve for a monopolistic competitor is likely to be flatter than that of a monopolist.
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8
The entry of new firms into a monopolistically competitive industry will cause the long-run equilibrium price to rise.
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9
In the long run, a monopolistically competitive firm earns small economic profits.
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10
Most economic activity in the United States is carried out by monopolies.
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11
The cost-revenue diagrams for a monopolist and a monopolistic competitor are similar except that the demand curve for the monopolistic competitor is flatter.
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12
In the long run, a monopolistically competitive firm's demand curve must be tangent to its average cost curve.
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13
Monopolistic competition is a market structure characterized by many small firms selling a homogeneous product.
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14
Monopolistic competition has at least one similarity to perfect competition: firms are free to enter and leave the industry.
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15
For the monopolistic competitor, MR = P.
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16
The demand curve for a monopolistic competitor is likely to be steeper than that of a monopolist.
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17
A monopolistic competitor can expect to earn an economic profit in the long run.
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18
Monopolistically competitive markets feature high barriers to entry.
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19
Monopolistically competitive markets feature heterogeneous products.
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20
Under monopolistic competition, profits cannot persist because new firms will be attracted to the market.
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21
The key difference between oligopoly and other market structures is the interdependence among producers.
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22
Society benefits from monopolistic competition because the firms are allocatively efficient.
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23
Oligopolists use advertising as a way of differentiating their products.
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24
An oligopoly is a market structure in which a few large firms dominate the sale of a single product.
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25
Oligopolistic firms never collude because they have almost no incentive to do so.
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26
An oligopolist cares very much about what other firms in her industry are doing.
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27
An oligopoly can be characterized by production of either identical goods or different goods.
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28
The excess capacity theorem states that society would clearly benefit from a reduction in the number of monopolistic competitors.
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29
The short-run equilibrium of the firm under monopolistic competition has excess capacity.
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30
Average cost is higher with a monopolistically competitive firm than with a perfectly competitive firm.
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31
Oligopolists seldom change prices, because they don't like change.
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32
Advertising never makes sense for an oligopolistic firm.
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33
When comparing industries, a monopolistically competitive industry is less competitive than an oligopoly.
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34
Oligopolists behave independently of each other.
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35
An oligopoly is a market in which at least some firms are large enough to influence market price.
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36
Oligopolies are difficult to analyze because of the interdependent nature of management decisions.
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37
An oligopoly is a market dominated by a few sellers.
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38
Oligopolists almost always cooperate in making price and output decisions.
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39
In the long run, a monopolistically competitive firm produces at minimum average cost.
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40
Excess capacity and inefficiency result under monopolistic competition.
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41
Price leadership is an example of explicit collusion by oligopolies.
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42
Cartels provide uniform management, but none of the advantages of economies of scale.
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43
Price leadership works only if there is a single, dominant firm in the oligopoly.
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44
The kinked demand curve model is based on the assumption that rival firms will match a price cut but ignore a price increase.
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45
One of the most famous cartels is OPEC.
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46
The kinked demand curve model explains pricing in monopoly markets.
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47
Economists place cartels among the least-desirable forms of market organization.
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48
The kinked demand curve is an explanation of sticky prices.
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49
Some oligopolies may try to maximize sales revenue rather than maximize profits.
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50
To maximize sales revenue, an oligopoly will expand output until the price is zero.
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51
Game theory is based on the idea that each participant makes decisions based on how she believes the competition will react.
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52
Sales maximization and profit maximization are essentially equivalent.
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53
Firms that maximize sales always produce more than profit-maximizing firms.
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54
A cartel is a group of sellers of a single product who have joined together in order to enjoy the advantages of perfect competition.
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55
To maximize sales revenue, an oligopolist will expand output until the marginal revenue curve cuts the horizontal axis.
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56
An oligopoly firm with a differentiated product will generally earn the largest profits without advertising.
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57
An oligopolist who sets the price for the industry is a price leader.
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58
Price leadership may sometimes be an example of covert collusive behavior by oligopolies.
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59
Sticky prices are a direct result of the kinked demand curve.
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60
Game theory may be used to solve problems of interdependent decision making by large firms.
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61
An oligopoly will always use game theory to maximize sales rather than profits.
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62
A dominant strategy is one that is best for one player regardless of the strategy chosen by the other player.
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63
All players have dominant strategies.
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64
A duopoly is a form of oligopoly with two firms.
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65
A monopolistically competitive firm

A)tries to differentiate its product from competitors' products.
B)faces a perfectly elastic demand curve for its product.
C)has more monopoly power in the long run than does a perfectly competitive firm.
D)is always a retail establishment.
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66
A dominant strategy is one that gives a player in a game a bigger payoff than the other player receives.
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67
A perfectly contestable market is one in which there are excessive costs to entry and exit.
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68
Identify the market structure characterized by many small firms selling somewhat different products.

A)Monopoly
B)Monopolistic competition
C)Perfect competition
D)Duopoly
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69
Repeated games can lead to tacit collusion.
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70
The maximin criterion seeks to minimize the maximum payoffs in order to win.
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71
The models of perfect competition and monopoly are the most realistic.
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72
A perfectly contestable market is one which a firm can enter and exit without losing its investment.
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73
Under perfect competition and monopolistic competition, profits are zero in long-run equilibrium.
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74
Which of the following is not a requirement for the existence of monopolistic competition in a market?

A)numerous small sellers
B)full information about the market among buyers and sellers
C)product homogeneity
D)freedom of entry into the market
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75
An oligopoly using a maximin strategy must believe that the losses from underestimating a competitor's skill are worse than those from overestimating it.
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76
Firms in a perfectly contestable market will earn higher profits than firms in markets that are not perfectly contestable.
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77
To understand most of today's economic activity in the U.S.economy, we should look at which of the following models?

A)perfect competition and pure monopoly
B)perfect competition and oligopoly
C)oligopoly and monopolistic competition
D)monopolistic competition and monopoly
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78
Monopolies can misallocate resources by restricting output in an attempt to raise prices and profits.
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79
Perfect competition and pure monopoly are concepts useful primarily for realistic application.
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80
International trade can be correctly considered as an example of a zero-sum game.
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