1 / 29

FIRMS AND MARKETS : FROM LOCAL TO GLOBAL

FIRMS AND MARKETS : FROM LOCAL TO GLOBAL. BA Festival of Science 2005, Trinity College Dublin Section F (Economics) Presidential Session 9.00 a.m. – 5.30 p.m., 7 September 2005 A one-day conference organised by the Geary Institute (UCD)

rafael-day
Download Presentation

FIRMS AND MARKETS : FROM LOCAL TO GLOBAL

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. FIRMS AND MARKETS:FROM LOCAL TO GLOBAL BA Festival of Science 2005, Trinity College Dublin Section F (Economics) Presidential Session 9.00 a.m. – 5.30 p.m., 7 September 2005 A one-day conference organised by the Geary Institute (UCD) and the Institute for International Integration Studies (TCD)

  2. FROM LOCAL TO GLOBAL: FIRMS AND MARKETS IN INTERNATIONAL TRADE J. Peter Neary University College Dublin and CEPR BA Festival of Science 2005, Trinity College Dublin 7 September 2005

  3. Introduction • Globalisation • General Equilibrium • Key: Interactions between goods and factor markets • Market Structure • Competition: Perfect or Monopolistic • Neary (JEL 2001, 2003a) • Oligopoly: Large Firms, entry barriers, strategic interaction • => “GOLE”: General Oligopolistic Equilibrium • Neary (JEEA 2003)

  4. Plan • Market Structure: • Perfect Competition • Monopolistic Competition • Oligopoly • Extensions of GOLE: • Endogenous mode of competition • Heterogeneous firms and endogenous market structure • Implications for Policy: • Fostering entrepreneurship • Foreign direct investment (FDI) and trade costs

  5. Plan • Market Structure: • Perfect Competition • Monopolistic Competition • Oligopoly • Extensions of GOLE: • Endogenous mode of competition • Heterogeneous firms and endogenous market structure • Implications for Policy: • Fostering entrepreneurship • Foreign direct investment (FDI) and trade costs

  6. Perfect Competition • Traditional benchmark: • “Small” firms • Homogeneous goods • Production costs independent of firm scale • Pro: • Very adaptable • Con: • Unrealistic • No allowance for increasing returns, product differentiation, etc. • e.g., Implausible implications for international production patterns

  7. O: No home or foreign production c F: Foreign production only • Equilibrium Production Patterns • in Perfect Competition a' H: Home production only c* a'

  8. Monopolistic Competition • Chamberlin (1933) • “Small” firms • Differentiated goods • Declining average costs /Increasing returns to scale • No perceived interdependence • Pro: • Precise, tractable, versatile • Con: • Unrealistic • Dixit-Stiglitz (1977) preferences:

  9. Monopolistic Competition (cont.) • Extensions: • Internal organisation of firms • Heterogeneous firms

  10. Oligopoly • Perceived interdependence central • Firms large in their own market • Progress delayed by difficulties of modelling firms large relative to the economy • Resolution: Assume many sectors, all small • So: firms themselves are small in the economy • Demand: “Continuum-quadratic” preferences:

  11. Oligopoly (cont.) • Simple model to illustrate effects of trade liberalisation • Heterogeneous sectors in 2 countries: • Integrated world market • Given numbers of firms at home & abroad: n, n* • Firms in each country have identical costs: c, c* • Cost configurations consistent with profitability:

  12. O: No home or foreign production HF: Home and foreign production c F: Foreign production only • Equilibrium Production Patterns • for Arbitrary Home and Foreign Costs a' H: Home production only c* a'

  13. Oligopoly (cont.) • To embed this in general equilibrium: • Costs depend on technology and wages • Wages (at home and abroad) determined in the labour markets

  14. c F: Foreign production only O • Equilibrium Production Patterns • for a Given Cost Distribution H: Home production only HF: Home and foreign production c*

  15. Oligopoly (cont.) • Specialisation patterns determined as shown • Wages and threshold sectors determined together in general equilibrium

  16. Plan • Market Structure: • Perfect Competition • Monopolistic Competition • Oligopoly • Extensions of GOLE: • Endogenous mode of competition • Heterogeneous firms and endogenous market structure • Implications for Policy: • Fostering entrepreneurship • Foreign direct investment (FDI) and trade costs

  17. Endogenous Mode of Competition • (joint work with Joe Tharakan, Natl. Univ. of Ireland, Maynooth) • “Cournot”/quantity-setting vs. “Bertrand”/price-setting • 2-stage capacity-price duopoly game: • [Kreps/Scheinkman (BJE 1983), Maggi (AER 1996)] • Investment in capacity commits a firm to charge higher prices • The credibility of the commitment depends on q, the cost premium of producing above capacity • If q is sufficiently high, then the outcome is “as if” competition was Cournot • Embed this in general equilibrium: • Assume a continuum of sectors z[0,1], with different values of q • Assume production (variable costs) uses unskilled labour and investment in capacity uses q(z) skilled labour; wages: w and r • Threshold sectors are then determined jointly with factor prices

  18. Heterogeneous Firms and Endogenous Market Structure • Firm heterogeneity in monopolistic competition: • [Melitz (Em 2003), Helpman-Melitz-Yeaple (AER 2004)] • Firms pay a sunk cost to reveal their productivity • Draw c from a distribution g(c) • Given their productivity, they calculate their expected profits and choose to produce or exit • Exit if c < ce where p(ce) = 0 or r(ce) = f . • If exporting and/or FDI require an additional fixed cost, only high-productivity firms will engage in them • Predictions are consistent with micro-empirical evidence • Extend to a continuum of sectors: • Firms draw a productivity and a sector: {c, z} • Sectors differ in their fixed costs: f(z), f´>0 • In equilibrium, sectors have different expected firm numbers

  19. E(ln2n) Monopolistic Competition 4 3 Oligopoly 2 1 Monopoly 0 1 Equilibrium Expected Market Structure

  20. Plan • Market Structure: • Perfect Competition • Monopolistic Competition • Oligopoly • Extensions of GOLE: • Endogenous mode of competition • Heterogeneous firms and endogenous market structure • Implications for Policy: • Fostering entrepreneurship • Trade costs and foreign direct investment (FDI)

  21. Fostering Entrepreneurship • How to encourage new (indigenous) firms? • Monopolistic Competition: • All entrants are de novo and identical • (Melitz: ex ante identical) • Spillovers from multinationals encourage indigenous entry • Theory: Markusen and Venables (EER 1999) • Empirical evidence: Görg and Strobl (EER 2002) • Oligopoly: Entry by diversification much more likely • Successful entrants are frequently incumbents in a related industry. • Theory: Gilbert and Newbery (AER 1982) • Empirical evidence: Geroski (IJIO 1995); Davies, Rondi and Sembenelli (IJIO 2001)

  22. Trade Costs and FDI • Dominant view of FDI: • Theory has focused on “greenfield” case • Mostly horizontal (i.e., concerned with market access) • Relative to exporting, encouraged by trade costs • This view consistent with much evidence • But: counter-factual implication: falls in trade costs should reduce FDI • c.f. Ireland in 1990s: huge increase in FDI while trade costs in EU fell • Resolutions: • Export-platform FDI: Falls in internal EU trade costs • Cross-border mergers: brown not green-field • How to explain cross-border mergers? • M&A’s a huge % of all FDI • A high % of mergers are cross-border • Cross-border merger waves linked to market integration [EU Single Market; Mercosur]

  23. Trade Costs and FDI (cont.) • How does trade liberalisation affect merger incentives? • No incentive if the 2 merging firms are identical • [Salant, Switzer, Reynolds (QJE 1983): “Cournot merger paradox”] • BUT: If firms differ in cost, a low-cost/high-cost takeover may be profitable

  24. Incentives for foreign firms to take over home Incentives for home firms to take over foreign Home firms face similar incentives: c F O • Takeover Incentives H HF c*

  25. Trade Costs and FDI (cont.) • Wage adjustment in general equilibrium: • Assume symmetric countries • Expanding and contracting firms in both • BUT: High-cost firms contract by more • So: Wages fall

  26. c F O • Cross-Border Mergers Tend to Reduce Wages • (unlike greenfield FDI) H HF c*

  27. Conclusion • Different approaches to modelling globalization • Here: Oligopoly in general equilibrium [GOLE] • Continuum of sectors avoids problems of firms being “too large” in the economy • Theoretical Applications: • Endogenous Mode of Competition [Bertrand vs. Cournot] • Heterogeneous Firms and Endogenous Market Structure • Level of fixed costs determines equilibrium expected number of firms • Policy Applications: • Fostering Entrepreneurship • Trade Costs and FDI • Standard model predicts that trade liberalisation will lower FDI • Oligopoly model avoids this • More work needed!

  28. Further Reading • Neary, J.P. (2001): “Of hype and hyperbolas: Introducing the new economic geography," Journal of Economic Literature, 39:2, June, 536-561. • Neary, J.P. (2002): “"Foreign direct investment and the single market," The Manchester School, 70:3, June, 291-314. • Neary, J.P. (2003a): “Globalization and market structure,” Journal of the European Economic Association, 1:2-3, April-May, 245-271. • Neary, J.P. (2003b): “The road less travelled: Oligopoly and competition policy in general equilibrium,” in R. Arnott, B. Greenwald, R. Kanbur and B. Nalebuff (eds.): Economics for an Imperfect World: Essays in Honor of Joseph E. Stiglitz, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 485-500. • Neary, J.P. (2003c): “Monopolistic competition and international trade theory,” in S. Brakman and B.J. Heijdra (eds.): The Monopolistic Competition Revolution in Retrospect, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 159-184. • Neary, J.P. (2005): “Trade costs and foreign direct investment,” presented at CESifo Summer Institute Workshop on Recent Developments on International Trade: Globalization and the Multinational Enterprise, Venice, July 2005. • [All these papers available at www.ucd.ie/economic/staff/pneary/neary.htm]

  29. European Trade Study Group (ETSG) 7th Annual Conference University College Dublin Thursday 8th – Saturday 10th September www.etsg.org

More Related