In economics a monopoly is a firm that lacks any viable competition, and is the sole producer of the industry's product. In a normal competitive situation, no firm can charge a price that is significantly higher than the Marginal (Economic) cost of producing (the last unit of) the product. If any firm doing business within a competitive situation tries to raise prices significantly higher than the Marginal cost of producing the product, it will lose all of its customers to either other existing firms that charge lower prices, or to a new firm that will find it profitable to use a lower price (closer to its marginal cost) to take customers away from the firm charging the higher price. But since the monopoly firm does not have to worry about losing customers to competitors, it can set a Monopoly price that is significantly higher than its marginal cost, allowing it to have an economic profit that is significantly higher than the normal profit that is typically found in a perfectly competitive industry. The high economic profit obtained by a monopoly firm is referred to as monopoly profit. In economics a monopoly is a firm that lacks any viable competition, and is the sole producer of the industry's product. In a normal competitive situation, no firm can charge a price that is significantly higher than the Marginal (Economic) cost of producing (the last unit of) the product. If any firm doing business within a competitive situation tries to raise prices significantly higher than the Marginal cost of producing the product, it will lose all of its customers to either other existing firms that charge lower prices, or to a new firm that will find it profitable to use a lower price (closer to its marginal cost) to take customers away from the firm charging the higher price. But since the monopoly firm does not have to worry about losing customers to competitors, it can set a Monopoly price that is significantly higher than its marginal cost, allowing it to have an economic profit that is significantly higher than the normal profit that is typically found in a perfectly competitive industry. The high economic profit obtained by a monopoly firm is referred to as monopoly profit. The existence of a monopoly, and therefore the existence of a monopoly price and monopoly profit, depend on the existence of barriers to entry: these stop other firms from entering into the industry and sapping away profits. According to Classical and Neo Classical Economic thought, firms in a perfectly competitive market are price takers because no firm can charge a price that is different from the equilibrium price set within the entire industry's perfectly competitive market. Since a competitive market has many competing firms, a customer can just easily buy widgets from any of the competing firms. Competing firms in a market essentially (each) face its own horizontal demand curve that is fixed at a single Price established by Market Equilibrium for the entire Industry as a whole. Each firm in a Competitive Market will have buyers for its product as long as the firm charges 'no more than' the 1 single Price. Since firms cannot control the activities of other firms that produce the same widget sold within the market, a firm that charges a Price that is higher than the industry's Market Equilibrium Price would lose all business as customers would simply respond by buying their widgets from other competing firms that charge the (lower) Market Equilibrium Price. . This makes Deviation from the Market Equilibrium Price impossible. Perfect competition is commonly characterized by an idealized situation in which all firms within the industry produce exactly comparable goods that are ('Perfect Substitutes'). With the exception of commodity markets, this idealized situation does not typically exist in many actual markets. However, in many cases, there exist products that are 'similar' (such as butter and margarine) which are relatively easily interchangeable because they are close Substitutes. A relatively significant rise in a product's price will tend to cause customers to switch from this good to a lower priced Close Substitute. In some cases firms that produce different but similar goods have relatively similar production processes; making it relatively easy for these firms of 1 good to switch their manufacturing process to produce the other different but similar good. This would be the case when the cost of changing the firm's manufacturing process to produce the different but similar good can be relatively 'immaterial' in relationship to the firm's overall profit and cost. Since consumers will tend to replace goods whose prices are relatively high with relatively cheaper 'Close Substitutes', the existence of 'Close Substitutes' whose manufacturing processes are similar enough so as to allow a firm (producing a relatively low priced good) to easily switch over to producing the other higher priced good, the Competition Model will still accurately explain why the existence of different 'similar goods' form competitive forces that deny any single firm the ability to establish a monopoly in their product; This is shown in a high profit and production cost industry such as the car industry and many other Industries facing Competition from Imports. By contrast, the lack of competition in a market ensures the firm (monopoly) has a downward sloping demand curve Although raising prices causes the monopoly to lose some business, some sales can be made at the higher prices. Though monopolists are constrained by consumer demand, they are not 'price takers' because they can influence price through their production decisions. The monopolist can either have a target level of output that will ensure the Monopoly Price as the given consumer demand in the industry reacts to the fixed and limited Market Supply, or it can set a fixed Monopoly Price at the onset and adjust output until it can ensure no excess inventories occurs at the final output level chosen. A each price, the firm must accept the level of output as determined by the market's consumer demand, and every output quantity is identified with a price that is determined by the market's consumer demand. The price and output are co-determined by consumer demand and the firm's production cost structure. A firm with monopoly power sets a monopoly price that maximizes the Monopoly profit. The most profitable price for the monopoly occurs when output level ensures the marginal cost (MC) equals the marginal revenue (MR)) associated with the demand curve. Under normal market conditions for a monopolist, this monopoly price will be higher than the Marginal (Economic) cost of producing the product, thereby indicating the price paid by the consumer, which is equal to the marginal benefit for the consumer, is above the firm's marginal cost. In the chart below the shaded area represents the profits of the monopolist, such that MR = MC for the case of monopoly. The lower half represents the normal profits that would go to a competitive firm (ignoring output losses). The upper half represent the additional economic profit going to the monopolist. In the absence of barriers to entry and collusion in a market, the existence of a monopoly, and therefore monopoly profit, cannot persist in the long run. (Note that a barrier can be caused by increasing returns to scale—a bigger firm can produce more cheaply. If the most efficient size firm serves the whole market, we have a 'natural monopoly,' and no other firms will 'rush' to enter.) Normally, when economic profit exists within an industry, economic agents rush to form new firms in the industry in an effort to obtain at least a portion of the existing economic profit. As new firms enter the industry, they increase the supply of the product available in the Market, and these new firms are forced to charge a lower price to entice consumers to buy the additional supply these new firms are supplying (they compete for customers). Since consumers will flock toward the lowest price (in search of a bargain), older firms within the industry actually face losing their existing customers to the new firms entering the industry, and are therefore forced to lower their prices to match the lower prices set by the new firms. New firms will continue to enter the industry until the price of the product is lowered to the point that it is the same as the average economic cost of producing the product, and all of the economic profit disappears. When this happens, economic agents outside of the industry find no advantage to entering the industry, supply of the product stops increasing, and the price charged for the product stabilizes. Essentially, a competitive situation always leads to an equilibrium solution'. Normally, a firm that introduces a brand new product can initially secure a monopoly for a short while. At this stage, the initial price the consumer must pay for the product is high, and the demand for, as well as the available of the product in the market, will be limited. In the long run, however, when the profitability of the product is well established, the number of firms that produce this product will increase until the available supply of the product eventually becomes relatively large, the price of the product shrinks down to the level of the average 'Economic cost' of producing the product. When this finally occurs, all monopoly associated with producing and selling the product disappears, and the initial monopoly turns into a (perfectly) competitive industry.