Principles of Economics With Land Reform and Taxation Monopoly: A Research About The Structure of This Market and Its Example
Principles of Economics With Land Reform and Taxation Monopoly: A Research About The Structure of This Market and Its Example
Principles of Economics With Land Reform and Taxation Monopoly: A Research About The Structure of This Market and Its Example
consumers. Given the presence of this deadweight loss, the combined surplus (or wealth) for the
monopolist and consumers is necessarily less than the total surplus obtained by consumers by
perfect competition. Where efficiency is defined by the total gains from trade, the monopoly
setting is less efficient than perfect competition.
It is often argued that monopolies tend to become less efficient and less innovative over
time, becoming "complacent", because they do not have to be efficient or innovative to compete
in the marketplace. Sometimes this very loss of psychological efficiency can increase a potential
competitor's value enough to overcome market entry barriers, or provide incentive for research
and investment into new alternatives. The theory of contestable markets argues that in some
circumstances (private) monopolies are forced to behave as if there were competition because of
the risk of losing their monopoly to new entrants. This is likely to happen when a
market's barriers to entry are low. It might also be because of the availability in the longer term
of substitutes in other markets. For example, a canal monopoly, while worth a great deal during
the late 18th century United Kingdom, was worth much less during the late 19th century because
of the introduction of railways as a substitute.
Canada. With AGECO's financial backing, Meralco began acquiring a number of existing utility
companies in the Philippines, enabling the company to expand beyond Manila.
By 1930, Meralco had completed construction of the Philippine's
first hydroelectric power plant, the 23MW Botocan Hydro Station, At the time, this plant was one
of the largest engineering projects in Asia and constituted the largest single private capital
investment in the Philippines. The additional capacity allowed the company to begin hooking up
customers throughout the metropolitan area.
V. CASES OF MONOPOLY
MERALCO, ABUSE OF POWER: A CASE OF MONOPOLY, RIGHTLY OR WRONGLY
- By: Manila Times (February 6, 2014)
Despite obvious lapse in judgment on the part of the power distribution company Manila
Electric Co. (Meralco), resulting into unnecessary expense and cost increase, still they have the
temerity to pass to the consumers a cost that they themselves wrongly misjudged. Because of
what seemed to be the companys greed for profit, in the guise of customer service, it looks
inevitable that consumers of Meralco have no other recourse but to bite the bullet, resulting
into the expected increased cost of electricity.
Such is the case of a monopoly; the ability to abuse and exploit the need of the consumers
despite reasonable schemes. The absence of a direct competitor that characterizes this market;
a monopoly ultimately provides the authority to act in any manner deemed appropriate for its
welfare despite destructive or disadvantageous to the consumers. These are the common
perceptions circulating among disgruntled consumers of the power distribution business, which
for all intent and purposes will be detrimental to the consumers.
Government as well as the private sector authorities have their both hands tied and caught
in a bind as regards their obscure position in this issue. The company with all its rights as a
monopoly has all the power to bring inconveniences to the people if ever their desire for a price
increase is not approved.
The mere fact that it has been on a deregulated status because of its privatized nature, the
government through the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) is merely an approving agency
meant to accept its entire clamor for a price adjustment, short of saying the ERC is a stamp pad
agency. That is how the system works in ERC, but we cannot entirely blame them because it is
a component of their very limited, if not inutile duties.
Meralco, for its part, is not the agency to blame for such actions for it is self-mandated
that a business should be profit maximizers, first and foremost. And this drive for profit should
supersede other objectives of the company; in the first place it is the goal for its existence. This
incessant clamor for maximum earnings will be a customary dilemma and should be resolved,
lest it becomes a lingering social crisis far more extensive in the years to come.
Economically and socially as well, a monopolys disadvantages outweigh its advantages.
The social implication of monopoly redounds to abuses that obliterate decent social structures,
because of inability to cope up with living conditions that should be rightfully enjoyed by
average individuals. This, however, cannot be blamed on the monopoly, because that is how this
stuff is made of; a benefit it enjoys because of the absence of competition, excessive profit and a
threat of service interruption if its whims and caprices are not granted.
It may be difficult, but it can be done. It would be much better than forever be immersed
in the quagmire of economic agony brought rightly or wrongly by the nature of a monopolistic
market structure.