- Monopolies have market power that allows them to raise prices without losing all demand for their products. Barriers to entry like large capital requirements, patents, and government franchises can prevent competition in imperfectly competitive industries.
- A pure monopoly is a single firm that produces a unique product and faces no competition due to barriers that prevent other firms from entering the market. As the sole producer, the monopoly is the entire industry.
- Monopolies restrict output and charge higher prices than competitive firms, leading to inefficient resource allocation and welfare losses for society. Antitrust policy aims to promote competition and limit monopolies through legislation like the Sherman Act.