THE EQUILIBRIUM AND SOCIALLY EFFECTIVE NUMBER OF FIRMS AT OLIGOPOLY MARKETS: THEORY AND EMPRIRICS Cover Image

THE EQUILIBRIUM AND SOCIALLY EFFECTIVE NUMBER OF FIRMS AT OLIGOPOLY MARKETS: THEORY AND EMPRIRICS
THE EQUILIBRIUM AND SOCIALLY EFFECTIVE NUMBER OF FIRMS AT OLIGOPOLY MARKETS: THEORY AND EMPRIRICS

Author(s): Alexander Filatov, Yana Makolskaya
Subject(s): Micro-Economics
Published by: Univerzitni servis s.r.o.
Keywords: oligopoly; strategic interaction; firm concentration; entry barriers; collusion; Nash equilibrium; social welfare; market regulation; corporate statistics

Summary/Abstract: The paper considers impact of entry barriers on the social welfare. Despite the common opinion that entry barriers are always bad, the excessive number of firms’ means, all pros aside, duplicated fixed costs. It is shown that the socially effective number of firms is smaller than the equilibrium one for the wide specter of demand and cost functions, and also for different strategies of companies’ behavior. This proposition is satisfied for the homogeneous product markets where output of each company decreases when the number of firms increases, and competition gets stronger. But there is the considerable danger of the increasing probability of collusion in a situation of number of firms’ limitation. We show that collusion is less dangerous than duplicated fixed costs if the gap between the choke price and marginal costs is less than a certain critical value connected with the ratio of fixed and variable costs. We back up our findings by the empirical research on the base of the financial statistics of the biggest world corporations.

  • Issue Year: 4/2015
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 17-31
  • Page Count: 14
  • Language: English