Title: Market structure and dynamic efficiency
1Market structure and dynamic efficiency
- What type of market structure (e.g. competitive,
oligopolistic) is most desirable from the
standpoint of bringing about technological
innovation? - The term dynamic efficiency ( or "technological
progressiveness") means the comparative strength
of the tendency among firms in a given market to
innovate--that is , to contribute to process and
product innovation in their industry.
2Process and Product Innovation
Process innovation Development of new
production techniques or methods of organization
that result in reduced unit production
cost. Examples high speed printing, just-in-time
inventory management, use of computer-guided
robotics, continuous process manufacturing, use
of hybrid seeds. Product innovation The
development and marketing of new or improved
products. Examples Cellular phones, pagers,
improved software applications, baked tortilla
chips, direct TV, compact disks, digital special
effects, internal frame backpacks, electronic
banking, antibiotics.
3The Solow contribution 1
- Solow's contribution was to develop a methodology
which made it possible to measure the
contribution of various factors (labor , capital,
technical change, . . . ) to productivity growth.
A key finding
80 percent of the change in labor productivity
(output per worker per hour) in the U.S. from
1909-1949 can be explained by "technical change,
as opposed to capital accumulation or
improvements in human resources.
Robert Solow. "Technical Change and the Aggregate
Production Function, " Review of Economics and
Statistics, August 1957.
4Function shifts due to innovation
K
PR
Output per worker per hour
B
PR
A
0
Capital/Labor ratio
5Productivity-boosting innovations
- Engineering time and motion studies
- The assembly line
- The internal combustion engine
- Air conditioning
- The cotton harvestor
- The transistor
- Internet browser software
- Electronic bar coding/automated data capture
6Joseph Schumpeter on structure and innovation 2
- Technical and organizational innovation is the
key factor in bringing about secular improvements
in the material standard of living. - Firms (and entrepreneurs) are agents of
innovation. - Firms may achieve a dominant position as a
result of a superior product, process, or
business acumen. However, the fortunes of
monopolistic (or oligopolistic) firms is
perpetually under threat from aggressive,
innovative rivals (see IBM). - A public policy that has as its primary
objective the promotion "allocative" efficiency
is misguided.
2 Joseph Schumpeter. Socialism, Capitalism, and
Democracy (1942). Click here to read a quote.
7What reasons are there to suppose that
imperfectly competitive market structures would
yield superior dynamic efficiency?
- Windfall profits realized by dominant firms
supply the wherewithal to finance costly RD
projects. - RD may be subject to important economies of
scale thus the optimal size of the dynamic firm
may be quite large. - Firms must enjoy a dominant position in their
market (or at least have a reasonable prospect of
achieving a dominant position as a result of
innovation) to take on the risk of costly and
uncertain RD projects. - New knowledge (the output of investment in RD)
is appropriable (that is, is easily ripped
off)--yet firms must be confident up front that
their rights to intellectual property will be
protected. But the protection of rights to
intellectual property (by means of patent laws,
for example) creates a barrier to entry.
8Price
Dynamically efficient monopoly
Supply curve if industry is competitive
PC
PM
D
MR
0
Quantity
Monopolists MC curve
QM
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