Title: Competition Among the Big and
1Competition Among the Big and the Small
Ken-Ichi Shimomura and Jacques-François Thisse
2Armchair evidence shows that many industries are
characterized by the coexistence of a few large
commercial or manufacturing firms, which are able
to affect the market outcome, as well as of a
myriad of small family-run businesses with very
few employees, each of which has a negligible
impact on the market
To the best of our knowledge, such a mixed market
structure has been overlooked in the literature
3According to Schumpeter
- In the case of retail trade the competition that
matters arises not from additional shops of the
same type, but from the department store, the
chain store, the mail-order house and the
supermarket which are bound to destroy those
pyramids sooner or later
4- Bertrand and Kramarz (2002) have
- showed that the Royer-Raffarin Law
- that the enforcement of this law has had
- a negative impact on job creation.
5The purpose of this paper is precisely to provide
a unified approach to study
(i) how those two types of firms interact to
shape the market outcome and (ii) whether or
not it is socially desirable to have large and/or
small firms in business
6Two standard models of industrial organization
the oligopoly à la Cournot with differentiated
products and the monopolistic competition
model of the Chamberlin-type
7discrete (atoms) and negligible varieties of the
differentiated product
The mixed market structure model obeys different
rules than standard oligopoly models
A specific model
CES
8The Model
Two goods Two production sectors One production
factor (labor)
The first good is homogenous and produced under
constant returns and perfect competition
The other good is a horizontally differentiated
product. It is supplied both by oligopolistic
firms and by monopolistically competitive firms
(MC-firms)
9Two sub-sectors governed by different forms of
competition
- Let N gt 1 be the number of
- oligopolistic firms and M gt 0 the mass
- of MC-firms
10(i) A representative consumer
Maximize
subject to
Price index of the MC-subsector
11Price index of the differentiated product
Demand functions
12(ii) Oligopolistic firms
(iii) MC-firms
and
13The Market Outcome
A mixed market equilibrium is defined as a state
in which the following conditions simultaneously
hold
(i) the representative consumer maximizes her
utility subject to the budget constraint
(ii) both oligopolistic and MC-firms maximize
their own profits with respect to output
(iii) the mass of MC-firms is positive and they
earn zero profits while oligopolistic firms earn
positive profits
14Firms are income-takers A symmetric mixed
market equilibrium in which all oligopolistic
firms choose the same output Q, whereas all
MC-firms have the same production policy q
Equilibrium price indices
15Proposition 1. The price at which oligopolistic
firms sell their output decreases when the mass
of MC-firms increasesProposition 2. There
exists a unique symmetric market equilibrium.
This equilibrium is mixed if and only if
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17The Industry Structure
Proposition 3. Both the equilibrium mass of
MC-firms and quantity index of this sub-sector
decrease when the number of oligopolistic firms
increases
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19Proposition 4. The equilibrium output of an
oligopolistic firm increases when the number of
oligopolistic firms rises
The shrinking of the MC-sector generated by the
entry of a large firm is sufficiently strong to
permit the expansion of the output of each
oligopolistic firm
Proposition 5. The industry price index
decreases when the number of oligopolistic firms
increases
20- Is Schumpeter right?
- The MC-subsector disappears when the number of
oligopolistic firms is sufficiently large
21Welfare
Proposition 6. Consider a symmetric mixed market
equilibrium, then, the total net income increases
when the number of oligopolistic firms increases
Proposition 7. Consider a symmetric mixed market
equilibrium, then the social welfare increases
when the number of oligopolistic firms increases
22CONCLUSIONS
(i) A mixed market with several large firms and a
small number of small firms is more efficient
than a market with fewer large firms and a larger
number of small firms
23- (ii) Considering a traditional economy populated
with small businesses, more affluent societies
and technological progress have combined to
facilitate the entry of a growing number of big
firms. This in turn triggers the decline of small
businesses in mixed markets endowed with old and
small firms as well as modern and big firms. This
concurs with the prediction made by many
observers, ranging from Karl Marx to Robert
Lucas. However, the fall in small firms' fixed
costs sparked by the development of the new
information technologies has permitted the
revival of SMEs.
24THE BOTTOM LINE Small need not be beautiful