网络经济与金融的应用【外文翻译】 .doc
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1、本科毕业论文(设计)外 文 翻 译原文: Network Economics with Application to FinanceNetworks and network externalities play a central role in the New Industrial Organization. Many network industries, such as telecommunications, railroads etc., are central to modern economic life. Further, the essential relationships
2、among the components of the network, i.e., complimentarily and compatibility, are present in many non-network industries, including financial intermediation and the exchange of financial instruments and assets. In this paper, we analyze and review the essential features of networks and show their ap
3、plication to finance. A crucial feature of networks is that they exhibit network externalities, i.e., production or consumption positive size externalities. In a typical network, the addition of a new customer (or network node) increases the willingness to pay for network services by all participant
4、s. When a new node is added to a network, new goods are created. Consumers demand these goods that were unavailable before. Thus, consumers are better off after the new node was added. The benefits of the addition of an extra node (or an extra customer) exceed the private benefits accruing to the pa
5、rticular node (or customer).As an example of this, consider a simple star network consisting of a central node S and peripheral nodes A, B, C, etc., as in Figure 1. This can be a telecommunications network if S is a central switch and A, B, C, etc. are the locations of the various customers. Custome
6、rs demand phone calls ASB, BSA, ASC, etc. These are composite goods, each comprised of two complementary components; for example ASB is comprised of AS and SB. Networks are by their nature self-reinforcing. This is just another way of saying that they exhibit positive size externalities. As a direct
7、 consequence of their self-reinforcing nature, networks frequently exhibit positive critical mass. This means that no network of size smaller than this positive size, called critical mass, is ever observed, at any price. How does this happen? Because of the self-reinforcing nature of the network, th
8、e same price can support two different network sizes associated with quite different utility despite the multiplicity of equilibriums; one expects that, for a given price, only the network that corresponds to the highest utility will be observed. Thus, small network sizes will not be observed, and t
9、he network exhibits positive critical mass.A second direct consequence of self-reinforcing is that optimality will not result from perfect competition. Marginal cost pricing on a network disregards the externality and therefore cannot support the first best. This opens the possibility that some mark
10、et structures (such as monopoly), which can coordinate expectations, might achieve larger network sizes and higher welfare than perfect competition. A monopolist has, as usual, an incentive to reduce output (network size) because his marginal revenue is below price. However, the monopolist also has
11、an opposing incentive. If the monopolist can coordinate consumers expectations so that they flock to the network, he can achieve (because of network externalities) a larger surplus for each consumer, which he can then appropriate. Nevertheless, Economides and Himmelberg (1993) show that, in a large
12、class of cases, the usual output-reducing incentive of the monopolist supersedes, so that he will provide a smaller network and will underperform perfect competition.A third consequence of the self-reinforcing nature of networks is that history matters. There is a possibility of lock-in at a Pareto
13、inferior equilibrium. For example, David claims that there are significant inefficiencies in the standard QWERTY U.S. keyboard, that the Dvorak keyboard is superior, and that the economy is locked-in at the inferior design because of significant switching costs, such as retraining and learning costs
14、. Clearly, the divergence of private and social interest, even under perfect competition can be further accentuated in sequential choices where, once a certain design choice has been made, it is privately optimal (and occasionally socially optimal) to keep improving that design rather than switching
15、 to a new design. An important consequence of these observations is that, in a network setting, coordination to a particular good equilibrium is important. Besides coordinating expectations, this may require joint decisions on investment, or sponsorship by a particular firm.Electronic call markets,
16、where all orders are batched together and executed at once, reduce market price uncertainty and utilize to a larger extent the network externality than a continuous market. Technological progress in electronic computers has made it possible to run electronic call markets where all stocks are cleared
17、 simultaneously. Economides and Schwartz (1993a) propose three calls a day (at the opening, at 12:00 and at the close) on top of continuous trading in the U.S. equity markets. Economides and Heisler discuss the theoretical equilibrium of the coexistence of call and continuous markets. Economides and
18、 Heisler establish the fee structure for transaction fees in a call market. Traders who enter their orders early are charged a lower fee as a reward for generating extra liquidity in the market.Financial markets exhibit significant externalities of two types. So far we have discussed in detail the p
19、ositive externalities created by traders through the provision of market liquidity, the possibility of capturing these externalities in a call market, and the possibility of encouraging higher liquidity through early declaration of market participation induced by lower transaction fees for early par
20、ticipants in call markets. A second externality arises because an underpriced output of a financial exchange network is the equilibrium market price. This information is of crucial importance to potential market participants. It shows the potential benefits and losses from a proposed trade done thro
21、ugh this network. For the benefit of these potential traders, market price should be reported as accurately as possible. However, the market price established in network X can be used by competing network Y to complete transactions within network Y. Thus, network X has a private incentive to report
22、prices inaccurately (for example to report a large bid-ask discrepancy).Things are further complicated, when one considers the effects of the utilization of market price information by opponents. The validity of the market price established in network X is an increasing function of the size of this
23、network. Thus, it may be better for a small network Y to use the price established in large network X, and not to engage at all in price discovery itself.This presents a crucial problem for the industrial structure of a market of competing networks. As more customers switch to network Y, the validit
24、y of the market price established in network X is reduced. Thus, we can end up with price being discovered within a small group of participants and used in a wider group.The search for increased market liquidity drives the markets toward compatibility and increased coordination. Compatibility increa
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