Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Even if the networks were to behave monopolistically, the rules wouldn't help viewers.
This means in the long run, a monopolistically competitive firm will make zero economic profit.
Monopolistically competitive firms are able to gain a greater degree of market share and as a result, increase prices.
Obviously, Microsoft has had significant opportunity to exploit its Windows creation monopolistically.
These models describe the decisions of households, monopolistically competitive firms, the government or central bank, and sometimes other economic agents.
Monopolistically competitive markets are also allocatively inefficient, as the price given is higher than Marginal cost.
Also reaching a critical stage are the growing popular doubts about the Communist Party's power to continue to govern the nation monopolistically.
There are unique information and information processing costs associated with selecting a brand in a monopolistically competitive environment.
Monopolistically competitive markets have the following characteristics:
The long-run characteristics of a monopolistically competitive market are almost the same as a perfectly competitive market.
Who is behaving monopolistically?
A monopolistically competitive market is productively inefficient market structure because marginal cost is less than price in the long run.
Brand awareness is an essential part of brand development which helps the brand to stand out from the others in this monopolistically competitive market.
Thus less efficient asset sales would not be necessary and liquid banks would not be able to behave monopolistically.
These depend, as might be expected, on the relative factor intensity of fixed and variable costs in the monopolistically competitive sector via and ().
In 1978, Krugman presented a number of ideas to Dornbusch, who flagged as interesting the idea of a monopolistically competitive trade model.
The same is likewise true of the long run equilibria of monopolistically competitive industries and, more generally, any market which is held to be contestable.
A plausible combination is suggested by Rees (1968): link managerial rewards to the firm's profit, but impose pricing rules to prevent prices being set monopolistically.
In a monopolistically competitive market, the consumer must collect and process information on a large number of different brands to be able to select the best of them.
A monopolistically competitive firm might be said to be marginally inefficient because the firm produces at an output where average total cost is not a minimum.
The rhetoric of liberalisation too frequently cloaks policies toward the single market that are dancing to the tune of monopolistically inclined interests of vast corporations.
"Every industry would like to operate monopolistically," said Stephen R. Barnett, a law professor at the University of California at Berkeley who has followed newspaper mergers.
The motivation behind this kink is the idea that in an oligopolistic or monopolistically competitive market, firms will not raise their prices because even a small price increase will lose many customers.
Yet beyond the broadcasting rights, which Charles F. Dolan's Cablevision has monopolistically pursued in partnership with Rupert Murdoch, has come ownership of the uniform, the history, the memories.
While monopolistically competitive firms are inefficient, it is usually the case that the costs of regulating prices for every product that is sold in monopolistic competition far exceed the benefits of such regulation.