Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
957375 | Journal of Economic Theory | 2007 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
We analyze a class of 'large group' Chamberlinian monopolistic competition models by applying different concepts of functional separability to the same set of first-order conditions for utility maximization. We show that multiplicatively quasi-separable (MQS) functions yield 'constant relative risk aversion' (CRRA), and, therefore 'constant elasticity of substitution' (CES), functions, whereas additively quasi-separable (AQS) functions yield 'constant absolute risk aversion' (CARA) functions. We then show that the CARA specification sheds new light on: (i) pro-competitive effects, i.e., profit-maximizing prices are decreasing in the mass of competing firms; and (ii) a competitive limit, i.e., profit-maximizing prices converge to marginal costs when the mass of competing firms becomes arbitrarily large.
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Authors
Kristian Behrens, Yasusada Murata,