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Endogenous market structure and the growth and welfare effects of economic integration

Pietro Peretto

No 00-14, Working Papers from Duke University, Department of Economics

Abstract: I study the growth and welfare effects of integration in a world economy populated by global oligopolists. For economies that move from autarky to trade, I show that growth and welfare rise because exit of domestic firms is more than compensated by entry of foreign firms so that integration generates a larger, more competitive market where firms have access to a larger body of technological spillovers that support faster growth. The effects of a gradual reduction of barriers to trade - a global reduction in tariffs - are different because economies start out from a situation where all firms already serve all markets. In this case, integration brings about a reduction of the global number of firms so that the variety of consumption goods and the diversity of innovation paths fall. The surviving firms, on the other hand, are larger and exploit static and dynamic economies of scale to a larger degree. These homogeneization and rationalization effects work in opposite directions. Under plausible conditions, the rationalization effect dominates and growth and welfare rise.

JEL-codes: E10 L16 O31 O40 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2000
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Journal Article: Endogenous market structure and the growth and welfare effects of economic integration (2003) Downloads
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