loquasagacious
NCAP Mooderator
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Is there such a thing as a natural monopoly and if there is should the Government own them?
Splitting hairs. Which should it own and why?What about 'Yes, and the Government should own some of them"?
That isn't a natural monopoly.I'm not sold either way but where a natural monopoly exists I'm relatively comfortable with the govt owning it. For example imo the wholesale arm of Telstra should not have been privatised.
Are you referring to the construction of this type of infrastructure in what is potentially a free market? I don't know why you have used an industry subject to the impact of an incredibly large and expensive government project, the presence of which immediately destroys any possibility of widespread competition developing. Government ownership of infrastructure is what seems to be the problem here, not privatisation.Commonly it is not feasible for two businesses to both build transport, telecommunications or energy infrastructure servicing the same consumer because the cost is too high. For example if the Government builds an NBN then no business would considered building a duplicate NBN because at a build cost of ~$40billion they will never make a return on investment. In these scenarios the first-mover/incumbent will be a natural monopoly.
Well you can define anything any way you want, which was very much my point. I was questioning whether exploitative monopolies able to extract large economic rents from consumers are likely to actually exist in the absence of government.There are plenty of sound frameworks which help to realistically define an industry (Porter's five forces for example) and therefore define whether or not a monopoly exists.
There are plenty of alternatives available to the copper wire system; mobile networks, radio, satellite communications. In parts of Europe entire cities are connected by wi-fi, and this technology is increasingly becoming cheaper. The technology needed to transmit data across power lines is also quite feasible.Using your example the convenience store is not a monopoly because the industry it is in is retail small-goods and groceries - it doesn't have power over it's suppliers and it's customers can easily access competitors. In contrast the wholesale copper-line telecommunications industry in Australia is monopolised by Telstra.
You underestimate how quickly innovation and creative destruction will take place in an unregulated market. I've already provided some explanation of why monopoly power would be threatened very quickly if high rent seeking occurred in these industries. You didn't even bother to refute my example of how easily alternatives to the electricity grid could be implemented.You touch on a valid point which is that to extract monopoly rents the demand for a good or service must be inelastic (no substitutes) however a maxim of microeconomics is that all demand is elastic in the long-term because of innovation and structural change. While technically true the time involved in the innovation/structural change process may be so protracted that the monopolist can extra monopoly rents for a very considerable period of time. Oil, telecommunications infrastructure and the electricity grid are prime examples of this.
But the price differential between mass produced and privately produced electricity is huge. There is still huge scope to add an extremely generous profit margin without losing customers.Maybe and No.
The whole idea of monopoly, natural or otherwise, is a bit of a joke. Whether a monopoly exists depends entirely on how broadly or narrowly you define an industry. Your local convenience store may have a monopoly on the supply of food in your neighborhood, but you would hardly think of it as a monopolist.
The myth we are taught is that if some greedy monopolist was take to over a vital "natural" monopoly like the electricity grid, they could extract massive prices and rip everyone off (hence the need for government ownership or regulation).
This analysis always ignores the presence of substitutes. Suppose a private, unregulated monopoly owned the entire power grid in Australia. Would they charge us all $500 a month (or something exorbitant) for our supply?
If they did, people would switch to substitutes. People would install solar panels, gas heating and buy petrol generators. Competitors may set up alternative power lines.
But this is so inefficient, right? Sure, but this would never happen in the first place. The mere threat of this happening is enough to keep the monopolist in check. Because once consumers switch to alternatives, even if the monopolist then lowers his price, he has lost all his customers. The risk to the monopolist is huge, because if he becomes to greedy he will loose almost all his customers and his multibillion dollar "monopoly" will become worthless.
Private "regulation" through contract law would also play a role. People purchasing new homes, or signing leases would probably demand some sort of guaranteed access to things like electricity, water and roads at reasonable prices.