We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is nonparametric in the sense that we abstain from imposing any functional specification on market demand and firm cost functions. We derive necessary and sufficient conditions for (reduced form) equilibrium market price and quantity functions to be consistent with the Cournot model. In addition, we present identification results for the corresponding inverse market demand function and the firm cost functions. Finally, we use our approach to derive testable restrictions for the models of perfect competition, collusion and conjectural variations. This identifies the conditions under which these different models are empirically distinguishable from ...
An observer makes a number of observations of an industry producing a homogeneous good. Each observa...
There are, essentially, two basic models for studying oligopolistic competition: the Cournot model, ...
We consider an observer who makes a finite number of observations of an industry producing a homogen...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
An observer makes a number of observations of an industry producing a homogeneous good. Each observ...
An observer makes a number of observations of an industry producing a homogeneous good. Each observa...
An observer makes a number of observations of an industry producing a homogeneous good. Each observ...
An observer makes a number of observations of an industry producing a homoge-neous good. Each observ...
An observer makes a number of observations of an industry producing a homogeneous good. Each observa...
An observer makes a number of observations of an industry producing a homogeneous good. Each observa...
There are, essentially, two basic models for studying oligopolistic competition: the Cournot model, ...
We consider an observer who makes a finite number of observations of an industry producing a homogen...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
We consider the testable implications of the Cournot model of market competition. Our approach is no...
An observer makes a number of observations of an industry producing a homogeneous good. Each observ...
An observer makes a number of observations of an industry producing a homogeneous good. Each observa...
An observer makes a number of observations of an industry producing a homogeneous good. Each observ...
An observer makes a number of observations of an industry producing a homoge-neous good. Each observ...
An observer makes a number of observations of an industry producing a homogeneous good. Each observa...
An observer makes a number of observations of an industry producing a homogeneous good. Each observa...
There are, essentially, two basic models for studying oligopolistic competition: the Cournot model, ...
We consider an observer who makes a finite number of observations of an industry producing a homogen...