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monopolmakt

Monopolmakt is a term used to describe the market power held by a monopolist, referring to its ability to influence prices, output, and terms of trade due to the absence of close substitutes and high barriers to entry. In economic theory, monopoly power is often measured by indicators such as the Lerner index (price minus marginal cost divided by price) or by market concentration metrics like the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index.

Key features of monopolmakt include a single or dominant supplier in a market, high barriers to entry

The presence of monopolmakt can lead to welfare losses for consumers, including higher prices and reduced output

Policy responses aim to limit or manage monopolmakt through antitrust regulation, price controls, public provision, or

(economies
of
scale,
legal
restrictions,
network
effects,
or
control
of
essential
inputs),
and
the
ability
to
exercise
strategic
behavior
such
as
price
discrimination,
output
limitation,
or
exclusive
contracts.
Market
power
is
not
merely
about
setting
prices;
it
also
shapes
product
availability,
innovation
incentives,
and
contractual
terms.
relative
to
a
competitive
benchmark.
Some
arguments
point
to
potential
efficiency
gains
in
certain
natural
monopolies,
where
single
provision
may
be
more
economical
due
to
high
fixed
costs
or
network
effects.
Nevertheless,
the
overall
effect
on
social
welfare
depends
on
regulation,
competition
policy,
and
how
benefits
and
costs
are
distributed.
measures
to
promote
entry
and
competition.
In
modern
economies,
concerns
about
market
power
extend
beyond
traditional
firms
to
digital
platforms
and
other
sectors
where
scale
and
network
effects
create
dominant
positions.
See
also
Monopoly,
Market
power,
Antitrust
law,
Regulation,
Natural
monopoly.