Equilibrium and the Adjustment Process in the Number and Scope of Co-operatives in Morocco
Articles
Adil Outla
University of Tangier, Morocco
Moustapha Hamzaoui
University of Tangier, Morocco
Published 2020-05-29
https://doi.org/10.15388/omee.2020.11.27
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Keywords

equilibrium
entry-and-exit flow
mean-reverting
entrants
speed of adjustment

How to Cite

Outla , A. and Hamzaoui, M. (2020) “Equilibrium and the Adjustment Process in the Number and Scope of Co-operatives in Morocco”, Organizations and Markets in Emerging Economies, 11(1), pp. 128–151. doi:10.15388/omee.2020.11.27.

Abstract

The paper discusses the government policy that encourages the emergence of co-operatives and analyzes the co-operatives in light of their growth in number. It establishes a static equilibrium and highlights the co-operatives’ adjustment process (dynamic equilibrium).
The methodology/approach consists of the development of a theoretical model, using the Nash equilibrium for the co-operative market, and the determination of a static equilibrium. It presents the data which includes variable measurements for the adjustment process for agricultural, artisanal, and fishery co-operatives in order to analyze the stochastic process of entry-and-exit flow of co-operatives. Accordingly, the paper estimates the co-operatives’ growth index speed of adjustment (SOA) as a function of the mean-reversion Ornstein–Uhlenbeck (OU) process.
The theoretical results indicate that co-operatives’ earnings depend on the number of co-operatives, market-demand, and the capacity constraint. They also show that the margin for new entrants is a dynamic gap that especially depends on demand, capacity constraint and the profits. The empirical results indicate that co-operatives growth-index process is significantly mean reverting for all sectors, and the speed of adjustment for artisanal co-operatives is significantly higher than for those in agriculture and the fisheries.

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