What is rent seeking? How does rent seeking affect the deadweight loss from monopoly?

What will be an ideal response?


Rent seeking is the act of obtaining special treatment by the government to create economic profit or to divert consumer surplus or producer surplus away from someone else. Often, rent seeking takes the form of lobbying to increase the economic profit of the lobbyist. Rent seeking increases the deadweight loss from monopoly. With rent seeking, not only does the monopoly create the (standard) deadweight loss, but also resources are used up in the process of rent seeking itself.

Economics

You might also like to view...

Economic theory is a necessity, not a luxury. This statement is true because theory

A. always leads to practical and useful policy. B. can prevent depressions in the economy. C. substitutes for vast amounts of data. D. provides a structure for organizing and analyzing data. E. always leads to accurate predictions.

Economics

Based on opportunity cost, where would one expect to have the most difficulty finding a teenager to baby-sit?

A) A high-income area with lots of teenagers B) A low-income area with lots of teenagers C) A middle-income area with lots of teenagers D) Any income area because teenagers no longer like babysitting

Economics

Public goods are not free. If we need a fighter aircraft, we are obliged to give up something else that could have been provided with the resources used to make the aircraft. The opportunity cost of providing aircraft can be represented in the

a. paradox of thrift b. aggregate expenditure curve c. marginal propensity to consume d. innovation cycle e. production possibilities curve

Economics

Refer to the information provided in Figure 9.2 below to answer the question(s) that follow. Figure 9.2Refer to Figure 9.2. The firm's ________ point is at a price of $6.

A. shut down B. profit maximizing C. break even D. loss maximizing

Economics