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5 - Rehabilitation of Marshall's life-cycle theory to explain diminishing cost

from Part I - Increasing returns and diminishing cost

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 September 2009

Takashi Negishi
Affiliation:
University of Tokyo
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Summary

Marshall offered several different solutions for the compatibility of increasing returns or diminishing cost and competitive equilibrium (see Robertson 1930 and Hague 1958).

  1. Individual firms face a downward sloping demand curve even in a competitive market, unless the market is ideally organized like a Walrasian one.

When we are considering an individual producer, we must couple his supply curve – not with the general demand curve for his commodity in a wide market, but – with the particular demand curve of his own special market. And this particular demand curve will generally be very steep; perhaps as steep as his own supply curve is likely to be, even when an increased output will give him an important increase of internal economies.

(Marshall 1961, p. 458. See also Marshall 1961, pp. 457 and 459 and Chapter 14 of this book.)

In this sense, it is also possible to argue that Marshall was a pioneer of modern theory of imperfect competition after Sraffa.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1985

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