| F. A. Hayek - 1978 - 261 páginas
...or are not available to them so readily: for their advantages which, though not strictly available on the competitive level of enterprise, are as a matter...instance, because monopolization may increase the share of influence of the better, and decrease the share of influence of the inferior brains. Such... | |
| Richard R. Nelson - 1985 - 456 páginas
...economies of scale in R&D and management, greater capabilities for risk spreading, finance, and so on. There are superior methods available to the monopolist...sphere of influence of the better, and decrease the sphere of influence of the inferior, brains, or because the monopoly enjoys a disproportionately higher... | |
| International Economic Association - 1986 - 588 páginas
...monopolist which either are not available at all to a crowd of competitors or are not available to them readily: for there are advantages which, though not...sphere of influence of the better, and decrease the sphere of influence of the inferior, brains, or because the monopoly enjoys a disproportionately higher... | |
| Zoltán J. Ács, David B. Audretsch - 1990 - 234 páginas
...a larger supply of innovations because, "There are advantages which, though not strictly attainable on the competitive level of enterprise, are as a matter of fact secured only on the monopoly level." While we have seen a major shift in the twentieth century, with the large firm and the industrial research... | |
| Zoltan J. Acs, Bo Carlsson, Charlie Karlsson - 1999 - 426 páginas
...Schumpeter, who argued, "The monopolistic firm will generate a larger supply of innovations because there are advantages which though not strictly unattainable...of enterprise, are as a matter of fact secured only at the monopoly level" (Schumpeter, 1942, p. 101). Just as there are persuasive theories defending... | |
| Zoltán J. Ács, David B. Audretsch - 2003 - 582 páginas
...(1942, p. 101 ) argued that, "The monopolist firm will generate a larger supply of innovations because there are advantages which, though not strictly unattainable...matter of fact secured only on the monopoly level." The Schumpeterian thesis, then, is that large enterprises are uniquely endowed to exploit innovative... | |
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