Market Structure with Interacting Consumers
Authored by Paul Ormerod, Camila C S Caiado
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1561/105.00000057
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Abstract
Economic theory has developed a typology of markets which depends upon
the number of firms which are present. Much of the literature, however,
is set in the context of a given market structure, with the consequences
of the structure being explored. Considerably less attention is paid to
the process by which any particular structure emerges. In this paper, we
examine the process of how different types of market structure emerge in
new product markets, and in particular on markets which are primarily
web-based. A wide range of outcome is possible. But the uncertainty of
outcome of the evolution of market shares in such markets is based, not
on the various strategies of the firms. Instead, it is inherent in the
behavioral rule of choice used by consumers. We examine the
consequences, for the market structure which emerges, of a realistic
behavioral rule for consumer choice in new product markets. The rule has
been applied in a range of different empirical contexts. It is
essentially based on the model of genetic drift pioneered by Sewall
Wright in the inter-war period. We identify the parameter ranges in the
model in which the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index is likely to fall within
the ranges identified by the US Department of Justice: unconcentrated
markets; moderately concentrated markets and highly concentrated
markets.
Tags
Agent based model
Evolution
Model
Culture change
Industrial concentration
Neutral selection