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Factor Market Oligopsony and the Production Possibility Frontier
Author(s) -
Devadoss Stephen,
Song Wongun
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
review of international economics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.513
H-Index - 58
eISSN - 1467-9396
pISSN - 0965-7576
DOI - 10.1111/1467-9396.00414
Subject(s) - economics , intermediate good , final good , commodity , production (economics) , capital (architecture) , capital good , production–possibility frontier , market power , factor market , wage , curvature , product (mathematics) , manufacturing sector , microeconomics , macroeconomics , labour economics , market economy , monopoly , public good , geometry , mathematics , archaeology , history
The authors consider a model with two final goods, one intermediate good, and two primary factors. One final good and the intermediate good are produced using primary factors, labor and capital. The other final good is produced using labor and the intermediate input. Producers of the second final good exert oligopsonistic market power on the intermediate input, which captures real world phenomena prevalent in the food processing and other manufacturing industries. If the capital/labor ratio in one final‐good sector is in between those of the intermediate‐input sector and the combined intermediate‐input and the other final‐product sectors, and if the oligopsony power is sufficiently large, the model generates results that are not adherent to the standard two‐sector Heckscher–Ohlin model. Results that deviate from the H–O model include the relationships between factor prices and commodity prices, the price–output effect, tangency between the price line and the PPF, and the curvature of the PPF.

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