Small-group monopolistic competition in a global computable general equilibrium model: Meeting the Markusen challenge
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Abstract
Since the 1990s, there have been rapid increases in concentration ratios in many industries in the U.S., Australia and, we suspect, in other countries. Despite this, applications of GTAP continue to be based on pure competition or Melitz-style Large-Group Monopolistic Competition (LGMC). In either case, all firms are small, there is free entry, and industries make zero pure profits. Markusen challenges modellers to move to Small-Group Monopolistic Competition (SGMC) in which industries have high levels of concentration and firms are aware of the likely behaviour of their rivals. By making two generalizations of Melitz-LGMC specifications, we create a version of GTAP in which some industries are modelled as SGMC. First, we treat the demand elasticities perceived by firms for their products as variables. In our SGMC specification, markups over marginal costs, which depend on perceived elasticities, rise when these elasticities are reduced (in absolute terms) by anti-competitive practices. Second, we allow for sticky adjustment of the number of firms in an industry and simulate situations in which entry is blocked or partially blocked, allowing incumbent firms to make positive pure profits. As illustrated in our simulations, the emergence of pure profits has the potential to suppress real wage rates.
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