This paper considers the consequences of a two-sector vertically-integrated model of firms producing output using firm-specific capital with a second sector producing firm-specific capital by adapting raw capital purchased in the market. Analysts rarely observe each sector separately. Aggregating over both sectors produces short-run and long-run factor demand functions that appear to be perverse, but when disaggregated obey standard neoclassical properties. Adjustment costs create the appearance of static inefficiency in the presence of dynamic efficiency.

More on this topic

BFI Working Paper·May 18, 2026

Proposed Mergers Where Efficiencies Are Needed Most Might Be the Least Likely to Deliver Them

Robert D. Metcalfe, Alexandre B. Sollaci, and Chad Syverson
Topics: Industrial Organization
BFI Working Paper·Mar 31, 2026

Salience and (Non-)Buyer’s Remorse: Optimal Nonlinear Pricing with Cognitively Constrained Consumers

Aaron L. Bodoh-Creed, Brent R. Hickman, John List, Ian Muir, and Gregory K. Sun
Topics: Industrial Organization
BFI Working Paper·Jan 6, 2026

Entry and Exit in Treasury Auctions

Jason Allen, Ali Hortaçsu, Eric Richert, and Milena Wittwer
Topics: Industrial Organization