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Abstract
This paper investigates consistency in the context in which conjectural variation have been
applied to the food industries. This is a homogeneous-product, quantity-setting model in which
firms are identical. Previous contributions in the American Journal of Agricultural Economics use
the model in a hybrid form, which is part conjectural variations and part Cournot. Stackelberg
(1934) and Leontief (1936) provide the foundations for a pure, conjectural variations approach.
When the model is applied in its correct form, the following conclusions are obtained; An
identical-finns, restricted-entry equilibrium yields a consistent conjecture. It is the monopolistic
conjecture. When entry is endogenous, consistency requires ,firm output to contract with new entry
and expand with exit, but there exists no conjecture that is consistent with equilibrium.
Consequently, the restricted-entry equilibrium, in which firms have monopolistic conjectures, is
unique. It predicts unambiguous grounds for public intervention in the food system, the premise
for which should be tested.