Options
Globalisation and market structure
Author(s)
Date Issued
2002-08-18
Date Available
2009-07-27T14:05:54Z
Abstract
This paper reviews some puzzling economic aspects of globalisation and argues that
they cannot be satisfactorily addressed in perfectly or monopolistically competitive models. Drawing on recent work, a model of oligopoly in general equilibrium is sketched. The model ensures theoretical consistency by assuming that firms are large in their own markets but small in the economy as a whole, and ensures tractability by assuming quadratic preferences defined over a continuum of goods. Applications considered include the effects of trade
liberalisation on industrial structure, on cross-border merger waves, and on the distribution of income between skilled and unskilled workers.
they cannot be satisfactorily addressed in perfectly or monopolistically competitive models. Drawing on recent work, a model of oligopoly in general equilibrium is sketched. The model ensures theoretical consistency by assuming that firms are large in their own markets but small in the economy as a whole, and ensures tractability by assuming quadratic preferences defined over a continuum of goods. Applications considered include the effects of trade
liberalisation on industrial structure, on cross-border merger waves, and on the distribution of income between skilled and unskilled workers.
Type of Material
Working Paper
Publisher
University College Dublin. School of Economics
University College Dublin. Institute for the Study of Social Change (Geary Institute)
Series
UCD Centre for Economic Research Working Paper Series
WP02/20
ISSC Discussion Paper Series
WP 2002/05
Classification
D50
L13
F12
Subject – LCSH
Globalization
Equilibrium (Economics)
Oligopolies
Competition, Imperfect
Language
English
Status of Item
Not peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
Loading...
Name
WP02.20.pdf
Size
505.12 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
aa05b926ceab37ab2d6d7b2e40d36672
Owning collection
Mapped collections