Buch, Englisch, 106 Seiten, Format (B × H): 170 mm x 244 mm, Gewicht: 216 g
Buch, Englisch, 106 Seiten, Format (B × H): 170 mm x 244 mm, Gewicht: 216 g
Reihe: Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems
ISBN: 978-3-540-08056-5
Verlag: Springer
Ever since A.C.Cournot(1838), economists have been increasingly interested in oligopoly, a state of industry where firms producing homogeneous goods or close substitutes are limited in number. The fewness of firms in oligopoly gives rise to interdependence which they have to take into account in choosing their optimal output or pricing policies in each production period. Since each firm's profit is a function of all firms' outputs in an oligopoly without product differ entiation, each firm in choosing its optimal output in any period has to know beforehand all other rival firms' outputs in the same period. As this is in general impossible, it has to form some kind of expecta tion on other firms' most likely outputs. Cournot thought that in each period each firm assumed that all its rivals' outputs would remain at the same level as in the preceding period. Needless to say, the Cournot assumption is too naive to be realistically supported. However, the Cournot profit maximizing oligopoly model characterized by this assumption has many important and attractive properties from the view point of economic theory and provides a frame of reference for more realistic theories of oligopoly. In Chapters 1-3, we shall be engaged in analyzing the Cournot oligopoly model in greater detail from the viewpoints of existence, stability, uniqueness and quasi-competitive ness of the equilibrium.
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Weitere Infos & Material
1. Existence and Stability of the Cournot Oligopoly Solution (Or Equilibrium).- 1.1. No Product Differentiation.- 1.2. Product Differentiation.- 1.3. Mathematical Appendix.- 2. Uniqueness of the Cournot Oligopoly Solution.- 3. Entry in the Cournot Model: Quasi-Competitiveness VS Perfect Competition.- 3.1. Introductory Remarks.- 3.2. Quasi-Competitiveness.- 3.3. Convergence to Perfect Competition.- 4. Revenue Maximizing Duopoly.- 4.1. Introduction.- 4.2. Stability Analysis.- 5. Stackelberg Duopoly Models Reconsidered.- 5.1. A Leader-Follower Model.- 5.2. Resolution of Stackelberg Disequilibrium in a Leader-Leader Model.- 6. Extrapolative Expectations and Stability of Oligopoly Equilibrium.- 6.1. Introduction.- 6.2. Stability under No Product Differentiation.- 6.3. Product Differentiation and Stability.- 7. Adaptive Expectations and Stability of Oligopoly Equilibrium.- 7.1. No Product Differentiation.- 7.2. Product Differentiation.- 7.3. Mathematical Appendix.- 8. Unknown Demand Function and Stability.- 8.1. Introduction.- 8.2. The Cournot Model with Unknown Market Demand Function.- 8.3. Adaptive Expectations and Unknown Demand Function.- 9. Probability Models.- 9.1. Probability Models with No Bayesian Learning.- 9.2. Bayesian Learning in Duopoly Models.- References.




