日期:2026/02/28 IAE
Civilizational Antitrust and Market Structure Rebalancing:
A Life-Value-Oriented Reformulation of Industrial Organization Theory
Frank Chen
Civilizational Economic School (Charity Economicism)
Abstract
Traditional antitrust doctrine evaluates market structure primarily through price, output restriction, and allocative efficiency. While this framework captures consumer welfare distortions arising from market power, it systematically excludes civilizational externalities—ecological degradation, intergenerational risk transfer, and systemic life-value erosion. This paper proposes a Civilizational Antitrust Model (CAM), which integrates life-value-adjusted marginal cost into industrial organization theory. By introducing a Life-Adjusted Pricing Condition (LAPC) and a Civilizational Antitrust Index (CAI), the model extends monopoly and oligopoly equilibrium analysis to include ecological and civilizational risk constraints. The results demonstrate that conventional equilibria underprice long-term survival costs. The normative objective of competition policy must therefore shift from allocative efficiency maximization to minimization of civilizational opportunity cost under sustainability constraints.
Keywords: antitrust theory, civilizational economics, life-value pricing, industrial organization, ecological externalities, intergenerational justice
1. Introduction
Antitrust policy has historically centered on allocative efficiency and consumer welfare (Bork, 1978; Posner, 2001). Under the standard framework, competitive harm is inferred when price exceeds marginal cost:
P>MC
However, modern production systems generate ecological and systemic risks that extend beyond static price distortions (Arrow, 1969; Nordhaus, 2013). Traditional industrial organization models omit:
-
Ecological external costs
-
Intergenerational depletion
-
Systemic civilizational risk
This paper argues that competition law must evolve to incorporate civilizational sustainability constraints. The objective of regulation should not merely be lower prices but lower long-run systemic risk.
2. The Standard Monopoly Model
Consider inverse demand:
P(Q)=a−bQ
Private cost:
C(Q)=cQ+2dQ2
Marginal cost:
MC(Q)=c+dQ
Profit maximization:
MR=MC a−2bQ=c+dQ QM=2b+da−c
This equilibrium omits ecological and life-value costs.
3. Civilizational Cost Extension
Let ecological external cost be:
EC(Q)=2eQ2 MEC(Q)=eQ
Let life-value loss (civilizational risk contribution) be:
LV(Q)=2v(κQ)2 MLV(Q)=vκ2Q
Total social marginal cost:
MSC(Q)=MC(Q)+MEC(Q)+MLV(Q) MSC(Q)=c+(d+e+vκ2)Q
4. Life-Adjusted Pricing Condition (LAPC)
Civilizational equilibrium requires:
MR=MSC a−2bQ=c+(d+e+vκ2)Q QC=2b+d+e+vκ2a−c
Because:
d+e+vκ2>d QC<QM
Life-adjusted equilibrium reduces output relative to monopoly equilibrium, thereby lowering systemic civilizational risk.
5. Oligopoly Extension (Cournot Framework)
Standard Cournot equilibrium:
Qi=b(n+1)a−c
With civilizational adjustment:
QiC=b(n+1)+e+vκ2a−c
Thus, as ecological or life-value parameters increase, equilibrium output declines.
6. Civilizational Antitrust Index (CAI)
Traditional concentration measure:
HHI=∑si2
Civilizational extension:
CAI=HHI⋅(1+ϕCR)
Where:
Regulatory trigger:
CAI>CAIthreshold
This embeds sustainability risk within merger review and structural policy.
7. Civilizational Opportunity Cost
Define Civilizational Opportunity Cost (COC):
COC=Resource Depletion+Ecological Damage+Intergenerational Loss
Policy objective:
minCOC
Subject to:
CR≤1
This redefines competition policy from static welfare optimization to survival-constrained minimization.
8. Capital Cost Adjustment
Let financing rate depend on systemic risk:
rc=r+θCR
Higher civilizational risk increases capital costs, incentivizing structural transition.
9. Normative Implications
Civilizational antitrust doctrine implies:
-
Merger review must incorporate ecological and life-value risk
-
High-risk concentration warrants structural remedies
-
Capital markets should internalize systemic sustainability constraints
-
Efficiency must be evaluated dynamically rather than statically
10. Conclusion
This paper reformulates industrial organization theory by embedding life-value costs into marginal analysis. The transformation can be summarized as:
Max Efficiency⇒Min Civilizational Opportunity Cost
Antitrust must evolve from price-centric doctrine to survival-oriented institutional design.
References (APA 7th Edition Format)
Arrow, K. J. (1969). The organization of economic activity: Issues pertinent to the choice of market versus nonmarket allocation. The Analysis and Evaluation of Public Expenditures.
Bork, R. H. (1978). The antitrust paradox. Basic Books.
Nordhaus, W. D. (2013). The climate casino: Risk, uncertainty, and economics for a warming world. Yale University Press.
Posner, R. A. (2001). Antitrust law (2nd ed.). University of Chicago Press.
Stiglitz, J. E. (1989). Markets, market failures, and development. American Economic Review, 79(2), 197–203.