Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › Research › peer-review
How Oligopolies May Improve Consumers’ Welfare? R&D Is No Longer Required! / Sidorov, Alexander.
Static and Dynamic Game Theory: Foundations and Applications. Birkhauser Verlag Basel, 2019. p. 245-266 (Static and Dynamic Game Theory: Foundations and Applications).Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › Research › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - How Oligopolies May Improve Consumers’ Welfare? R&D Is No Longer Required!
AU - Sidorov, Alexander
PY - 2019/1/1
Y1 - 2019/1/1
N2 - The paper studies how the industry concentration affects the Social welfare, which is measured as consumer’s indirect utility. Schumpeterian hypothesis tells that the harmful effect of oligopolization may be offset by positive externalities of concentration, such as innovations in technologies, R&D, etc. This contradicts to traditional neoliberal paradigm, which insists that concentration is always harmful for the end consumers. We study a general equilibrium model with two types of firms and imperfect price competition. Firms of the first type are monopolistic competitors with negligible impact to market statistics, subjected to typical assumptions, e.g., free entry until zero-profit cut-off. Unlike this, the firms of second type assumed to have non-zero impact to market statistics, in particular, to consumer’s income via distribution of non-zero profit across consumers-shareholders. Moreover, these large firms (oligopolies) allow for dependence of profits on their strategic choice, generating so called Ford effect. The first result we present is that in case of CES utility the concentration effect is generically harmful for consumers’ well-being. However, the result may be different for preferences, generating the demand with Variable Elasticity of Substitution (VES). We find the natural assumption on VES utilities, which hold for most of the commonly used classes of utility functions, such as Quadratic, CARA, HARA, etc., which allows to obtain the positive welfare effect, i.e., to justify Schumpeter hypothesis.
AB - The paper studies how the industry concentration affects the Social welfare, which is measured as consumer’s indirect utility. Schumpeterian hypothesis tells that the harmful effect of oligopolization may be offset by positive externalities of concentration, such as innovations in technologies, R&D, etc. This contradicts to traditional neoliberal paradigm, which insists that concentration is always harmful for the end consumers. We study a general equilibrium model with two types of firms and imperfect price competition. Firms of the first type are monopolistic competitors with negligible impact to market statistics, subjected to typical assumptions, e.g., free entry until zero-profit cut-off. Unlike this, the firms of second type assumed to have non-zero impact to market statistics, in particular, to consumer’s income via distribution of non-zero profit across consumers-shareholders. Moreover, these large firms (oligopolies) allow for dependence of profits on their strategic choice, generating so called Ford effect. The first result we present is that in case of CES utility the concentration effect is generically harmful for consumers’ well-being. However, the result may be different for preferences, generating the demand with Variable Elasticity of Substitution (VES). We find the natural assumption on VES utilities, which hold for most of the commonly used classes of utility functions, such as Quadratic, CARA, HARA, etc., which allows to obtain the positive welfare effect, i.e., to justify Schumpeter hypothesis.
KW - Additive preferences
KW - Bertrand competition
KW - Ford effect
KW - Monopolistic competition
KW - Schumpeter hypothesis
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85073191392&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-23699-1_13
DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-23699-1_13
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85073191392
T3 - Static and Dynamic Game Theory: Foundations and Applications
SP - 245
EP - 266
BT - Static and Dynamic Game Theory
PB - Birkhauser Verlag Basel
ER -
ID: 21861404