Michael Perelman wrote:
> research and development expenses are
> part of fixed costs.
Michael, in reading your discussion, I was led to wonder what fixed
costs are and why they are relevant. From a forward-looking perspective
and in the absence of various interventions, the question faced by the
entrepreneur is whether revenues from sales will be sufficient to cover
all costs, including research and development (R&D) costs to companies
like Microsoft and Pfizer and the costs to railroads of laying track (or
cable companies of laying cable). An economist who emphasizes so-called
fixed costs, it seems to me, is one who recognizes that entrepreneur
planning takes account of two factors. The first is the rather obvious,
but sometimes neglected, fact that costs that are incurred before
revenues are received. In other words, the economist is recognizing that
real entrepreneurship entails planning in order to try to maximize. The
second is the fact that in many cases, there are overhead costs. In this
category are 2a, costs that must be incurred no matter how many units of
a specific good one plans to supply and 2b, costs that may contribute to
the production of more than one type of specific good (Marshall's case
of joint supply). Do you mean fixed costs to refer to category 2a here?
If so, how does this square with the examples?
As I see it, there is no obvious reason to hypothesize that competition
would be any more or less vigorous if these factors were present in the
calculations of entrepreneurs than it would be if they were absent.
One element that may confuse the interpreter of history is the presence
of capital goods. After capital goods are produced, their prices may
rise or fall for all sorts of reasons that have nothing to do with
depreciation and that were not predicted. Changes in capital goods
prices may lead to a situation in which it is profitable for one
entrepreneur to purchase all of the capital goods of a given type that
were produced or purchased by other previously competing entrepreneurs.
If this happens, the buyer might become a single supplier who uses this
type of capital good in supplying some good or service. However, since
the situation (technology, wants, availability of resources) is now
different from that which prevailed at the start, when there were
competing owners, one cannot legitimately deduce that competition has
declined. One must view competition from the perspective of consumers,
and not only of consumers of a single product but of the class of
products that satisfy a particular class of wants, a la Kelvin
Lancaster's definition of a goods. The nature of the particular goods
demanded by consumers to satisfy a particular class of wants are likely
to have changed. I don't know how one could determine whether there is
greater or lesser competition without identifying the particular goods
and wants. From this point of view, neither Vedder nor you seem to
provide sufficient support for your respective propositions. (I have not
read your book, however, so I cannot speak to the issue of whether you
deal with the issue there.)
Another potentially confusing element is the use of the model of perfect
competition to describe real market competition. The perfectly
competitive model has a use in economics but it is not to describe real
market competition. No doubt some economists have confused the model
with reality. But no "good" economist makes this error.
With respect,
Pat Gunning
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