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Monopoly Competition & Public Policy (350-0-20)

Instructors

James Andrew Hornsten
847/491-8220

Meeting Info

University Hall 102: Tues, Thurs 9:30AM - 10:50AM

Overview of class

This course focuses on a particular market failure - monopoly - in the context of antitrust law, public utility regulation, network effects, and intellectual property. First, profit-seeking firms may try to reduce competition through entry deterrence, predation, horizontal mergers, vertical integration, or collusion. We will use economic theory and landmark legal cases to study the purpose and development of antitrust law, which is meant to reduce the adverse effects of anti-competitive business practices. Next, large fixed costs of building and maintaining a physical network may generate natural monopolies in markets for electric power, natural gas, and water. We will explore the challenges regulators face when they attempt to apply market controls such as price caps so an essential service remains affordable. We will also ponder the proper role of government in today's digital economy, which features a number of platforms featuring network effects that result in a small number of operating systems, streaming services or social networks. Finally, society might be willing to trade short-term welfare loss for long-term gains by granting temporary monopolies (e.g., patents or copyrights) to provide an incentive to innovate. We will analyze the ideal scope of artificial monopoly rights and the natural tension between intellectual property and antitrust law. Throughout the course we will explore the general topic of regulation and industry cases, both current and historical.

Registration Requirements

ECON 281-0, ECON 310-1, and ECON 310-2. Instructor Notes: This course covers advanced material on monopoly and game-theoretic oligopoly models.

Learning Objectives

After completing this course you will be able to use decision- and/or game-theoretic models to answer the following types of problems: 1. Conduct welfare analysis for a monopoly facing a variety of demand and cost conditions. 2. Predict the profit-maximizing input choice of a standard monopsony. 3. Compare a natural monopoly's choices under several kinds of regulation. 4. Show how the terms of a licensing contract will affect the revenues of a patent holder. 5. Explain an antitrust authority's concern with a merger or case of predation.

Class Materials (Required)

There is no required textbook, but supplementary materials (slides, articles, podcasts, videos) will be made available through Canvas.

Class Materials (Suggested)

(Recommended) Viscusi, Harrington, Jr. and Sappington (2018) Economics of Regulation and Antitrust, 5th edition, Cambridge: MIT Press, ISBN: 978-0262038065

Enrollment Requirements

Enrollment Requirements: Pre-requisite: Students must have taken ECON 310-1 or MMSS 211-1 and ECON 281 or ECON 381-1 or MATH 386-1 or IEMS 304 or STAT 350 to successfully enroll in this course.

Associated Classes

DIS - University Hall 102: Fri 10:00AM - 10:50AM