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A Schumpeterian Model of Duopolistic Competition

https://doi.org/10.26794/2308-944X-2022-10-1-24-40

Abstract

This paper models the dynamics of technological change through the competitive interaction of two  firms. The duopolists strive to outperform each other by exploiting the two fundamental Schumpeterian forces of economic development: innovation and imitation. Method. By extending over a number of periods a technological “limit-pricing model” (whereby the “learning-by-doing effect” is the source of the barrier to entry) and assuming that the two firms compete following one another in the role of innovator and imitator. As result, it is possible to trace out the paths followed by the market shares of both producers and to derive endogenously a unit cost curve characterizing the industry in the long run. Conclusion. A further merit of the model presented herein is its representation of a “micro-macro transition phase” — viz., the passage from individual practice to industrial standard — through a simplified but, nonetheless, realistic depiction of behavioural routines.

About the Authors

G. G. Preparata
Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome
Italy

Guido Giacomo Preparata — D. Sc. in Political Economy, MPhil in Criminology, Senior Lecturer in Political Economy and Social Sciences



G. Preparata
Princeton, Harvard, NYU, CERN, Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome
Italy

Giuliano Preparata — D. Sc. (Physics), professor emeritus



References

1. Schumpeter Joseph. The Theory of Economic Development: An Inquiry into Profits, Capital, Credit, Interest, and the Business Cycle. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Economic Studies; 1934 [1911].

2. Dosi Giovanni. Technical Change and Industrial Transformation. London: Macmillan; 1984.

3. Marshal Alfred. Principles of Economics —And Introductory Volume. London: Macmillan; 1920.

4. Iwai Katsuhito. Schumpeterian Dynamics: An Evolutionary Model of Innovation and Imitation. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization. 1984;5(2):159–190.

5. Iwai Katsuhito. Schumpeterian Dynamics, Part II: Technological Progress, Firm Growth and ‘Economic Selection’. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization. 1984;5(3–4): 321–351.

6. Nelson Richard R., Winter Sidney G. An Evolutionary of Economic Change. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press; 1985.

7. Winter Sidney G., Toward a Neo-Schumpeterian Theory of the Firm. Industrial and Corporate Change. 2006;15(1): 125–14.


Review

For citations:


Preparata G.G., Preparata G. A Schumpeterian Model of Duopolistic Competition. Review of Business and Economics Studies. 2022;10(1):24-40. https://doi.org/10.26794/2308-944X-2022-10-1-24-40



ISSN 2308-944X (Print)
ISSN 2311-0279 (Online)