Title: EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVES IN ECONOMICS
1EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVES IN ECONOMICS
- Luigi Orsenigo
- University of Brescia
- KITeS CESPRI, Bocconi University
- Open University
2Outline
- Basic concepts and inspirations of evolutionary
economics - Â
- Methodology and the essence of the evolutionary
approach - Â
- Evolutionary Models of industrial dynamics,
innovation and technical change - Â
- Developments in Evolutionary Modelling
3BASIC CONCEPTS AND INSPIRATIONS
- Antecedents Marshall, Schumpeter, Alchian, etc..
- Â
- Â
- The invisible hand and the natural selection
metaphor competition like natural selection
(survival of the fittest)? (Milton Friedman) - Â
- Â
- Institutionalism Veblen, Hodgson
4The new evolutionary economics
- Nelson and Winter 1982
- Â
- Â Innovation, technical change
- Dynamics
- Bounded Rationality
- Organizations
- Institutions
- Schumpeterian competition
- Economic growth
- Â
- How is it that some kind of order emerges out
of the actions of heterogeneous agents, who do
not understand very well the constantly and
endogenously changing environment in which they
live? - Â
- Dynamics first
- Bounded rationality
- Disequilibrium
5The Principles (from S. Winter)
- 1.     Realism!
- It may not be a necessity for good theory, but it
is often a virtue at least at the prevailing
margin. There is no need to take off one head and
put on another one when you step reading the
business page and start doing economics - 2.     Dynamics first!
- To impose on dynamic theory the burden of
supporting a pre-existing static equilibrium
analysis, is essentially to put on blinders,
making it inevitable that obviously significant
issues will be overlooked - 3.     No free calculation!
- It is an abiding scandal that the
self-proclaimed science of scarcity routinely
treats all forms of deliberation and information
processing as free. This scandal reaches
Monica-gate proportions in rational expectations
and other sophisticated equilibrium concepts that
implicitly endow each actor with the ability
solve every actors problem many times over. - 4.     Firms are profit seeking!
- It is a true fact of nature that firms are
typically profit seeking, but it is not a true
fact of nature that they are typically profit
maximizing. Profit maximization is a theorists
crutch and ought to be abandoned when it is too
stark to capture the reality of profit seeking or
too cumbersome to permit analysis of any but the
most extremely stylized models
6- .5.     Innovation is always an option!
- One thing a profit-seeking firm can do rather
than optimize over a given set of possibilities
is to think of some new possibilities. Hence,
every analysis of such optimizing behavior
deserves an asterisk leading to a footnote that
says unless, of course, there is a better idea. - 6.     Firms are historical entities!
- They typically display pronounced inertial or
quasi-genetic traits (e.g. scale/ routines) that
are clearly persistent enough to shape their
actions over interesting prediction periods.
They ought to be represented that way in theory,
positioned in model history the way real firms
are positioned in real history. - 7.     Firms are repositories of productive
knowledge! - In most contemporary societies they are in fact
the key repositories of technological and
organizational knowledge and among the key agents
of historical change. The storage and advance of
knowledge, the maintenance and improvement of
organizational capabilities, are complementary
roles.
7- 8.     Progress is co-evolutionary!
- Technological and organizational innovation is
generated by a variety of firm-level search
processes. But firms do not search independently,
they look to rivals, suppliers and customers for
ideas, technologies and practices. And these
firm and industry processes go forward in the
context of a variety of public and private
institutions and programs, which in turn are
shaped by the firms. I could tell you that itÃs
really simpler than that, but That Would be
Wrong. - 9.     Anything can happen for a while!
- As Schumpeter said, only when things have had
time to hammer logic into men is it safe to
assume that some level of rationality will
characterize economic outcomes. Market discipline
and economic natural selection constrain outcomes
over time, but in the short run anything can
happen.
8The Evolutionary Approach
- Analysis of changing systems
- Change is partly exogenous, but partly
endogenous - Change is partly stochastic and partly
deterministic - Agents are different, do not understand perfectly
the world and cannot look too far ahead - Selection
- Learning
- Institutions
- Â
- Methodological commitments
- Â
- start from stylized facts
- empirically-based assumptions
- appreciative theorizing
- models
9The Evolutionary Metaphor
- Heterogeneous Populations (agents, routines,
technologies, etc) - Â
- Selection define fitness and how fitness selects
among things. But fitness can be
multidimensional, may change over time
(Hyper-selection, co-evolution) and may be partly
endogenously determined. - Â
- Units of selection genotypes and phenotypes
- Â
- Mechanisms of selection
- Â
- Adaptation and variation bounded rationality,
learning and discovery - Â
- Does selection optimize?
- Â
- Â
10Applications
- Economic History and History of Technology
(Rosenberg, Chandler, Galambos, Mokyr, Vincenti,
Basalla, Freeman) technology and organizational
institutional forms co-evolve over time - Â
- Business and Management (Teece, Utterback,
Rosenbloom, Pisano, Henderson, Winter..)
competence-based theories of the firm - Â
- Individual and Organizational Learning (Dosi,
Marengo, Malerba) - Â
- Consumer Behaviour (Dosi)
- Â
- Industrial Organization (Dosi, Malerba, Klepper,
Metcalfe..) - - empirical studies of the evolution of
particular industries - Innovation studies (Freeman, Pavitt, Cantwell,
Archibugi,.) - Industrial dynamics
- Â
11Applications (ctd.)
- Growth (Dosi, Silverberg, Verspagen)
- Â
- Trade (Dosi, Verspagen, Cantwell..)
- Â
- Policy (Metcalfe, Winter,.)
- Â
- Â
- Methodologies
- Case Studies
- Experimental Economics
- Econometrics
12Evolutionary Models of Industrial Change
- Build a formal argument to reproduce and
explain specific stylized facts - Â
- The argument is derived from appreciative
theorizing - Â
- Dynamic stochastic systems when analytic
treatment is impossible, simulate the model - Â
- Derive simplified, compact versions of the model
and solve it analytically - Â
13Simulation
- Heuristic technique, widely used in other
sciences - Â
- Inductive approach
- Â
- Theory-driven and disciplined
- Â
- Problems of validation robustness, sensitivity
analysis, ability to reproduce facts, calibration - Â
14- Nelson and Winter 1982, Winter 1984
Schumpeterian competition - Â
- Heterogeneous firms, characterized by capital
stock and routines, produce, invest and search
for new techniques - Invest in RD or imitation a fraction of turnover
- Double draw scheme first draw from a
distribution to determine whether the effort was
successful or not if yes, draw from another
distribution to determine the extent of the
improvement - Produce and sell with the new technique,
determine profits - More profitable firms, invest more in capital
stock and RD and grow (success breeds success) - Markov process
- Â
- In Winter 1984 entry, exit
- Â
15Applications and results
- Emergence of concentration in industries
undergoing technical change - Â
- Â
- Â
- Endogenous market structure concentration
increases with conditions of opportunity,
appropriability and cumulativeness (technological
regimes) - Â
- Â
- - Technical change is higher in concentrated
industries - Â
- Â
16History Friendly Models
- CLOSER RELATIONSHIP WITH HISTORICAL AND EMPIRICAL
ANALYSIS - Â
- INDUSTRY-SPECIFICITIES
- Â
- PUT MORE RESTRICTIONS ON MODELS
- Â
- DERIVE TIME-PATHS, NOT SIMPLY LIMIT PROPERTIES
- Â
- FORMALIZE AN APPRECIATIVE ARGUMENT (Sources of
industrial advantages) - Â
- Â
17The Evolution of the Computer Industry
- Four eras
- early experimentation and mainframes
(transistors) - introduction of integrated circuits and
subsequent development of minicomputers. - personal computer, made possible by the invention
of the microprocessor. - networked PCs and the Internet.
- Discontinuities concerning both components
technology (transistors, integrated circuits, and
microprocessors) and the opening of new markets
(minicomputers, PCs). - One firm - IBM - emerges as a leader in the first
era and keeps its leadership also in the
successive ones, surviving every potential
"competence-destroying" technological
discontinuity. - In each era, however, new firms have been the
vehicles through which new technologies opened up
new market segments. - The old established leaders have been able to
adopt the new technologies and - not always and
often facing some difficulties - to enter in the
new market segments, where they gained
significant market shares but did not acquired
the dominant position they previously had.
18Questions
- What determines the emergence of a dominant
leader in the mainframe segment? - What are the conditions that explain the
persistence of one firm's leadership in mainframe
computer, despite a series of big technological
"shocks"? - What allowed IBM to enter profitably into new
markets (PCs) but not to achieve dominance?
19The era of transistors, entry and the mainframe
industry
- At the beginning, the only available technology
for computer designs is transistors. - N firms engage in efforts to design a computer,
using funds provided by "venture capitalists" to
finance their RD expenditures. - Some firms succeed in achieving a computer that
meets a positive demand and begin to sell. This
way they first break into the mainframe market.
Some other firms exhaust their capital endowment
and fail. - Firms with positive sales uses their profits to
pay back their initial debt, to invest in RD and
in marketing. - With RD activity firms acquire technological
competencies and become able to design better
computers. Different firms gain different market
shares, according to their profits and their
decision rules concerning pricing, RD and
advertising expenditure. - Over time firms come closer to the technological
frontier defined by transistor technology, and
technical advance becomes slower.
20The introduction of microprocessors
- After a period t', microprocessors become
exogenously available. This shifts the
technological frontier, so that it is possible to
achieve better computer designs. - A new group of firms tries to design new
computers exploiting the new technology, in the
same way it happened for transistors. - Some of these firms fail. Some enter the
mainframe market and compete with the incumbents.
- Some others open up the PC market.
- Incumbents may choose to adopt the new technology
to achieve more powerful mainframe computers. - Diversification in the PC market
21Computers in the space of characteristics
22Customers and Markets
- Computers are offered to two quite separate
groups of potential customers. - "large firms", greatly values performance and
wants to buy mainframes. - "individuals", or "small users", has less need
for high performance but values cheapness. It
provides a potential market for personal
computers. - Each of the two user groups requires a minimum
level" of performance and cheapness before they
are enticed to buy any computer at all. Then, the
value that customers place on a computer design
is an increasing function of its performance and
its cheapness.
23Demand
- The probability, Pi, that a particular submarket
will buy a computer i is - c0 is specified so that the sum of the
probabilities adds to one. - Mi denotes the "value" of computer i.
- "mi" is the market share of the firm who produces
computer i - the market share variable can be interpreted
either in terms of a "bandwagon" effect, or a
(probabilistical) lock-in of consumers who
previously had bought products of a particular
brand. - The constant parameter d1 assures that even
computers that have just broken into the market,
and have no previous sales, can attract some
sales. - "A" is the advertising expenditure of a firm.
- The constant parameter d2 performs here a similar
role to d1 for firms who have just broken into
the market and have not yet invested in
advertising. - If consumers in a particular submarket decide to
buy computer i, then M is the number of machines
they buy.
24Innovation
- In every period the "merit " of the computer each
firm is able to achieve along its technological
trajectory --performance and cheapness improves
according to - R, is the firm's RD expenditure, where i1 is
performance and i2 is cheapness. - T represents the number of periods that a firm
has been working with a particular technology. - Li-Xi, measures the distance of the achieved
design from the technological frontier. The
closer one gets to the frontier, the more
technological progress slows down, for every
given level of RD expenditure. There is also a
random element to what firm achieves, given by e.
25Profits, prices, RD
- Profits ?t Mp Mk,
- Price pt k (1?t)
- Mark-up ?t 0.9?t-1 0.1(mi/( ?- mi ),
- Where ? is demand elasticity
- RD expenditures Rt, ? ?t (1- ?)
- Advertising
26The dynamics of concentration
27Counterfactuals
28Counterfactuals 2
29Policy experiments
30Theoretical experiments failed adoption
31Experimental Users
32Pharmaceuticals
- Innovation as a quasi random process
- Innovation and imitation
- Market fragmentation
- Low concentration, despite high RD and marketing
33Pharmaceuticals
34- Random search, patent
- Development
- Product launch and marketing
- Imitation
35(No Transcript)
36Counterfactuals
- Costs and economies of scale
- Market size and demand growth
- Market fragmentation
- Innovative opportunities
- Patent protection
37CHANGING VERTICAL SCOPE OF FIRMS IN OF THE
COMPUTER AND SEMICONDUCTOR INDUSTRIES
38Understanding the determinants of specialization
and vertical integration in related industries
in uncertain and dynamic environments,
characterized by technological
discontinuities. Major factors capabilities,
technical change and market size Co-evolutionary
processes
39- A capability-based, dynamic theory of vertical
integration and specialization - Competence accumulation in specific technological
and market domains - Competence destroying technological change
- Coordination and integration capabilities
- Capabilities take time to develop
- Decisions to specialize and vertically integrate
are not symmetrical - The distribution of capabilities among all
industry participants are relevant - Market selection amplifies the effects of
capabilities on the vertical scope of firms - The identity of firms affects the development of
capabilities
40SPECIALIZATION AND INTEGRATION DECISIONS
- VERTICAL INTEGRATION decision is led by
- - the relative size of the computer firm compared
to the largest SC component producer
(capabilities, RD, innovation) - - the age of the SC component technology
- SPECIALIZATION decision is led by
- Comparison between the quality of SC components
produced in-house and the quality of SC
components available on the market
41History Friendly Simulation
42- TESTING THE MODELCOUNTERFACTUALS
- Does lack of external markets lead to more
vertical integration? - Do no demand lock-ins in mainframes lead to more
specialization ? - Do no demand lock-ins in semiconductors lead to
more vertical integration ? - Does a minor technological discontinuity in
microprocessors lead to more vertical integration?
43No external market for SC
44Policy exercises
- Antitrust
- Public procurement
- Investment in basic research
- Unintended consequences
- - The creation of open standards in computers
may lead to the emergence of concentration in
components - - Antitrust policy in computers may lead to the
emergence of a monopolist in the PC market and
the disappearance of a the merchant component
industry. - -Open standards in systems may lead to the
emergence of a merchant component industry
45User- Produce relations
- Dynamic matching
- Specific and generic bonus
- Contact length
- Exclusive contracts
- Lead users