Copyrights to papers in the Duke Economics Working Paper Archive remain with the authors or their assignees. Archive users may download papers and produce them for their own personal use, but downloading of papers for any other activity, including reposting to other electronic bulletin boards or archives, may not be done without the written consent of the authors. It is the authors' responsibility to notify the archive managers when they wish to have the paper removed.

Duke Economics Working Paper #95-48

Cost Reduction, Entry, and the Dynamics of Market Structure and Economic Growth


Pietro F. Peretto

Abstract

I study the joint determination of market structure and growth in an oligopolistic economy. Firms run in-house R&D programs to produce over time a continuous flow of cost-reducing innovations. In symmetric equilibrium, the relation between market structure and growth has two aspects. First, a larger number of firms induces fragmentation of the market and dispersion of R&D resources. This prevents exploitation of scale economics internal to the firm and slows down growth. Second, the number of firms changes with market and technology conditions and is endogenous. In particular, R&D spending is a fixed cost and there is a negative feed-back of the rate of growth on the number of firms. The explicit consideration of the interdependence of market structure and growth identifies a fundamental trade-off between growth and variety that produces interesting results. For example, the scale effect is bounded from above and converges to zero when the number of firms is large. Moreover, the market grows too little and supplies too much variety. This inefficiency is not due to technological externalities but to oligopolistic pricing and the interaction between R&D and entry decisions.

Keywords: Growth, Entry, Market Structure, R&D, Technological Progress.

JEL: E10, L16, O31, O40

Published in Journal of Monetary Economics, Vol. 43, No. 1, February 1999, pp. 173-195.