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A city has one water distribution network: pipes under every street, treatment facilities, pumping stations. Building a second competing water pipe network would cost billions and serve the same customers — resulting in two systems each running at half capacity, both with far higher average costs than the single system. It is genuinely cheaper for one firm to serve the whole market than for two firms to split it. No amount of competition policy can make this market efficiently competitive — it is a natural monopoly.
The setup
A natural monopoly exists when a single firm can supply the entire market demand at lower cost than any combination of two or more firms. The condition arises when the long-run average cost (LRAC) curve is still declining at the point where it intersects the market demand curve — meaning a larger firm always has lower average costs than a smaller one at any relevant output level.
The root cause is an extreme ratio of fixed to variable costs. The fixed infrastructure — pipes, wires, tracks, spectrum licenses — is enormously expensive to build. Once built, the marginal cost of serving one more customer is very low. Splitting this fixed cost across the entire market in one firm minimizes average cost; splitting it across two or more firms means each duplicates the high fixed cost while serving fewer customers.
What happens — and why
Left unregulated, a natural monopolist behaves like any monopolist: it produces where MR = MC, prices above MC, and generates deadweight loss. The consumer harm from monopoly pricing in essential services (water, electricity, gas) motivates government intervention.
But the regulatory problem is challenging:
Set P = MC (allocative efficiency): price equals marginal cost but may fall below average cost — the firm loses money and requires a subsidy to stay solvent. Water utilities regulated this way require public subsidy or user fees structured to cover fixed costs.
Set P = ATC (cost-of-service regulation): the firm breaks even (covers all costs) but faces no incentive for cost efficiency — any cost is passed to consumers. Rate-of-return regulation is vulnerable to gold-plating (deliberate overcapitalization to inflate the rate base).
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) regulates natural gas pipelines and electricity transmission under cost-of-service frameworks — the primary U.S. approach to natural monopoly regulation.
Where you see it in the wild
The Edison Electric Institute's utility data documents the electric transmission grid: enormous fixed costs (hundreds of billions in transmission infrastructure), near-zero marginal cost for additional kilowatt-hours transmitted, and a single-firm structure in each geographic area that is both economically efficient and legally mandated. Electricity generation is increasingly competitive (multiple generators competing to supply power); transmission remains a natural monopoly requiring regulation.
The fix (or why it's hard to fix)
No regulatory approach resolves the natural monopoly dilemma without residual inefficiency. Modern policy often separates naturally monopolistic segments (pipes, wires, tracks) from potentially competitive segments (power generation, retail gas supply, train operations) — regulating only the infrastructure layer while introducing competition where feasible. This structural separation approach underlies electricity market restructuring in many U.S. states and the EU.





