|Has page=Lee,Wilde (1980) - Market Structure And Innovation A Reformulation
|Has bibtex key=
|Has article title=Market Structure And Innovation A Reformulation
|Has author=Lee,Wilde
|Has year=1980
|In journal=
|In volume=
|In number=
|Has pages=
|Has publisher=
}}
*This page is referenced in [[PHDBA602 (Innovation Models)]]
==Reference(s)==
*Lee, T. and L.L. Wilde (1980), "Market structure and innovation: A reformulation", Quarterly Journal of Economics, 94, pp. 429-436. [http://www.edegan.com/pdfs/Lee%20Wilde%20(1980)%20-%20Market%20structure%20and%20innovation%20A%20reformulation.pdf (pdf)]
@article{lee1980market,
title={Market structure and innovation: a reformulation},
author={Lee, T. and Wilde, L.L.},
journal={The Quarterly Journal of Economics},
pages={429--436},
year={1980},
publisher={JSTOR}
}
==Abstract==
Expected costs are thus:
:<math>\mathbb{E}C = \int_0^{\infty} \left ( \int_0^{t} x e^{-rs} ds \right ) \cdot pr(\hat{\tau_i} = t or \tau_i = t) dt + F\;</math>
In the full equilibrium, as a result of symmetry, it is the case that:
:<math>a = (n-1)h(\hat{x})\;</math>
Letting the implicit solution to <math>\frac{\partial \mathbb{E}\pi}{\partial x} = 0\;</math> be denoted <math>\hat{x} = H(a)\;</math>, then in the full equilibrium <math>\hat{x} = H((n-1)h(\hat{x}))\;</math>.
We can see the comparative static with respect to <math>n\;</math> is also exactly opposite to that of Loury (providing an analogous stability condition holds):