|Has article title=Monopolistic Competition And Optimum Product Diversity
|Has author=Dixit Stiglitz
|Has year=1977
|In journal=
|In volume=
|In number=
|Has pages=
|Has publisher=
}}
*This page is referenced in [[BPP Field Exam Papers]]
==Reference(s)==
*Dixit, A. and J. Stiglitz (1977), "Monopolistic competition and optimum product diversity", American Economic Review 67, 297-308. [http://www.edegan.com/pdfs/Dixit%20Stiglitz%20(1977)%20-%20Monopolistic%20competition%20and%20optimum%20product%20diversity.pdf pdf] [http://www.edegan.com/repository/Dixit%20Stiglitz%20(1977)%20-%20Class%20Slides.pdf (Class Slides)]
@article{dixit1977monopolistic,
title={Monopolistic competition and optimum product diversity},
author={Dixit, A.K. and Stiglitz, J.E.},
journal={The American Economic Review},
volume={67},
number={3},
pages={297--308},
year={1977},
publisher={JSTOR}
}
==Abstract==
The basic issue concerning production in welfare economics is whether a market solution will yield the socially optimum kinds and quantities of commodities. It is well known that problems can arise for three broad reasons: distributive justice; external effects; and scale economies. This paper is concerned with the last of these.
==Summary==
A model of product differentiation driven by sheer taste for variety (not risk diversification or distance).
==The Model==
The model involves consumer optimization, firm optimization of production scale and entry decisions, solving for number of firms and a comparison to a planner's solution.
The assumptions of the model are:
*<math>n\,</math> (large) firms producing differentiated goods <math>x_1,\ldots,x_n\,</math> which sell for <math>p_1,\ldots,p_n\,</math>.
*<math>x_0\,</math> is a numeraire good (i.e. money)
where <math>y = (\sum_{i=1}^{n} x^\rho )^{\frac{1}{\rho}}\;</math> and <math>q = \left(\sum_{i=1}^{n}p_i^{-1}{\frac{1-\rho}{\rho}}\right)^{-\frac{1-\rho}{\rho}}\,</math>
===Market Behaviour===
The firm's problem is that changing <math>p_i\,</math> will not only affect demand for its own good, but for also affect all other firms (i.e. elements <math>q\,</math> and <math>y\,</math>).
However, if we can consider <math>q\,</math> to be invariant in the firm's decisions, demand elasticity is easier to characterize. This assumption is realistic (i.e <math>\frac{dq}{dp_i} \approx 0\,</math> and <math>\frac{dq}{dp_i} \approx 0\,</math>) if the number of firms is very large. It is in fact checkable in a symmetric equilibrium that these partials go to zero as <math>n \to \infty\,</math>.
A planner would use lump sum taxation (so as not to distort incentives) to cover fixed costs, and then marginal cost pricing to get efficient production.
and then optimize by the number of firms. However, by the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Envelope_theorem envelope theorem], both optimizations can be performed simultaneously. Therefore FOCs wrt <math>x\,</math> and <math>n\,</math> give (respectively):
This gives planner solutions <math>x^p\,</math> and <math>n^p\,</math>.
===Comparing solutions===
To make the comparison we need to plug in for <math>u(\cdot)\,</math> into the market solution and eliminate it (by substitution) from the planner's solution (see [http://www.edegan.com/repository/PHDBA279C-DalBo-Lecture2.pdf handout]. Doing this gives
On comparison is turns out that the market solution '''does not create too much entry'''. The business stealing effect is mitigated by difficulties in appropriating consumer surplus.