--%>

Market power and excess capacity

A monopolist which does not price discriminate cannot concurrently maximize profit and: (w) charge a price equal to marginal cost. (x) minimize average cost. (y) charge a price equal to minimum average cost. (z) produce only zero economic profit.

Can anybody suggest me the proper explanation for given problem regarding Economics generally?

   Related Questions in Microeconomics

  • Q : Biography-Thorstein Veblen The thought

    The thought that the desire of people to purchase goods is culturally recognized as opposed to the price determined is the vision of: (i) Irving Fisher. (ii) Karl Marx. (iii) Thorstein Veblen. (iv) Ludwig von Mises. (v) Antoine Augustin.

    Q : Gaining more Consumer Surplus I have a

    I have a problem in economics on gaining more Consumer Surplus. Please help me in the following question. Sushi lovers would be most probable to gain more consumer surplus as an outcome of rises in the: (i) Price of the steamed rice. (ii) Supply of sushi. (iii) Income

  • Q : Illustrate an example of arbitrage

    Purchasing oil into Kuwait for $22 per barrel and selling that you purchased for $30 per barrel into Sao Paolo is an illustration of: (w) speculation. (x) bifurcation. (y) a subsidy. (z) arbitrage. I need a good answer on the topic

  • Q : Tastes and Preferences in travel

    Can someone help me in finding out the right answer from the given options. Raised ‘love boat’ ticket sales in response to a sequence of stunning travel commercials point out a raise in the: (i) Quantity of romantic vacations demanded. (ii) Demand for the

  • Q : When are average and outputs prices of

    Average and Outputs prices for CDs and DVDs both rose throughout 1999 to 2000 (before the start of Napster and subsequent file-sharing software), which implying: (1) supply of prerecorded music should have grown. (2) law of demand doesn’t apply

  • Q : Characterized purely-competitive markets

    Purely-competitive markets are NOT characterized through: (i) substantial barriers to entry and exit. (ii) many small potential buyers. (iii) many small potential sellers. (iv) homogeneous products. (v) zero long-run economic profits.

    Q : Minimum Wage Laws I have a problem in

    I have a problem in economics on Minimum Wage Laws. Please help me in the following question. Minimum wage legislation has been promotes as a technique to: (i) Make sure that workers are paid beneath the subsistence salaries. (ii)  Perpetuate poverty. (iii) Maxim

  • Q : Linear demand curves and elasticity

    When price falls and quantity rises along a negatively-sloped linear demand curve: (1) total revenues fall till elasticity equals zero, then this rises. (2) demand is decreasingly price elastic. (3) there is a contrad

  • Q : Demand for product when its sales fall

    When a 10% hike in the price of paisley socks causes sales to fall with 20%, the demand for such socks is: (1) perfectly inelastic. (2) relatively inelastic. (3) unitarily elastic. (4) relatively elastic. (5) perfectly elastic. <

  • Q : Vigorous competition in long run market

    Vigorous competition into a market depends in the long run most strongly upon the: (w) number of buyers and sellers presently in the market. (x) freedom to enter and exit the market. (y) sizes of the average firm within the market. (z) uniformity [hom