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A Theory of Efficient Cooperation and Competition

This 1987 book looks at the process of competition.

Lester G. Telser (Author)

9780521306195, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 25 September 1987

320 pages, 11 b/w illus. 21 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm, 0.6 kg

This 1987 book looks at competition, attacking the notion that competition always leads to good results and that more competition is better. It also attacks the notion that cooperation is always harmful. An efficient economic equilibrium requires an optimal combination of both cooperation and rivalry. Telser first examines the genesis of certain late nineteenth-century laws that affected competition in the United States. Going on to give theoretical insights into cooperation and rivalry, he shows when unrestricted competition can lead to an efficient equilibrium, as well as when restrictions on competition can provide for the same. The tensions between these two forces are especially pertinent to the study of innovation - the more costly it is to protect the property rights of ideas, the greater is the reliance on secrecy, and hence, the more likely is the wasteful duplication of results.

List of tables
Preface
1. Prologue
2. Perceptions and reality: the genesis of the Sherman act
3. Competition, cooperation, and efficiency
4. Stable coalitions
5. Equilibrium with decreasing average cost: an application of the theory of the core illustrated by production and exchange among spatially separated markets
6. A theory of self-enforcing agreements
7. Some new results on duopoly applied to theories of Cournot, Bertrand, and Edgeworth
8. Rivalry by means of innovation
References
Index.

Subject Areas: Economic theory & philosophy [KCA]

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