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INDUSTRIAL ECONOMICS I

INDUSTRIAL ECONOMICS I. Concentration and Profitability. Introduction. 2 views. 1. Many economists favor the view of building up monopoly power (e.g. through merger.) Even if it has the advantage in creating economies of scale and has the potential of exploiting consumers.

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INDUSTRIAL ECONOMICS I

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  1. INDUSTRIAL ECONOMICS I Concentration andProfitability

  2. Introduction • 2 views. • 1.Many economists favor the view of building up monopoly power (e.g. through merger.) • Even if it has the advantage in creating economies of scale and has the potential of exploiting consumers. • This is also the view of the US authorities.

  3. Introduction • The European view is more ad hoc. • Each merger proposal is taken based on its merit. • The authorities will decide based on its net advantage to the society. • The concern is on the increase in concentration allowing prices to raise higher cost. Hence, increase in profits. • If profits are greater than opportunity cost, there is no gain to society. • The link is from concentration to profit.

  4. Introduction • Demsetz (1973), however, said that this is not the case. • The causal link is not from concentration to profitability. • The link is from efficiency to concentration and efficiency to profit.

  5. Demsetz – Monopoly Power. • Assume that there is constant unit costs, so there is no economies or diseconomies of scale. • Therefore marginal cost is equals average cost. • Suppose there are a number of firms in the industry. • Each firm faces downward sloping demand curve. – firms restricts output and raises price above marginal cost.

  6. Demsetz – Monopoly Power. The diagram shows price is charged at P1. Firm makes abnormal profit by producing at Q1. Total revenue is at OQ1 x 0P1. Total cost is output times MC, i.e. OQ1 x Q1B. Thus, profit above normal is OQ1 x AB. Suppose firm improves cost efficiency through R&D and produce output at lower cost. No other firms got the technology, therefore the firm has lower cost structure than other firms. Originally MC1=AC1, now MC2=AC2 Profit maximizing output is OQ2 at price P2. Price and cost P1 A S P2 MC1 = AC1 B R MC2 = AC2 MR D 0 Q1 Q2 output

  7. Difference in View • The first view links concentration to profit. • Demsetz disagrees. What has enable firms to raise profits is superior efficiency. • The effect of superior efficiency makes volume of output larger • Another important effect is that firms make more profit. Total profit is OQ2 x OP2.

  8. Demsetz’s View • According to Demtsez, the superior efficiency also leads to concentration. • Firm produced higher proportion of industry output than before at the same time making more profit. • Profit is a reward towards increase in efficiency.

  9. Demsetz’s View • Increase in profitability is temporary. • Technology, over time will be diffused throughout the economy. • High profit in the industry will attract new entries into the market which will also be able to develop superior techniques. • Over time all firms in the industry will be using superior techniques

  10. Demsetz’s View • Increase in concentration without government intervention is temporary. • Unless firm with market power keeps price to the level where only normal profit is earned.

  11. Demsetz’s View • Increase concentration is good. • Increase in profitability is also good. • Consumers are not being exploited. • Increase in efficiency will benefit consumer in the long run. • This is a relaxed view about link between concentration profitability and market power.

  12. Demsetz’s View CR4 Number of R1 R2 R3 R4 R industries % % % % % 10-20 20-30 30-40 40-50 50-60 Over 60 14 22 24 21 11 3 7.3 4.4 5.1 4.8 0.9 5.0 9.5 8.6 9.0 9.5 9.6 8.6 10.6 9.9 9.4 11.2 10.8 10.3 8.0 10.6 11.7 9.4 12.2 21.6 8.8 8.4 8.8 8.7 8.4 11.3 CR4: four-firm concentration ratio measured on industry sales in 1963 R1: firms with assets < US$500,000. R2: firms with at least US$500,000 assets but < US#5 million. R3: firms with at least US$5 million assets but < US$50 million. R4: firms with assets > US$50 million. Source: Densetz (1973) p.6, Table 2.

  13. Demsetz’s View • Consider a CR4 Table. • a number of industries with different degrees of concentration. • Rates of return (ROR) of firms of various sizes are given for each group. • E.g.14 industries with CR4 is between 10-20% ROR on assets to the smallest firms (R1) averaged 7.3%. • CR4 of over 60% there is only three such industries.

  14. Demsetz’s View • In general the relatively unconcentrated industries the variation in the ROR as firm size increase is quite small. • Moving towards a more concentrated structure the difference between ROR made by small firms and ROR made by big firms is getting bigger.

  15. Demsetz’s View • 2 ways to explain the findings: • 1. one possibility is that the larger firms in more concentrated industries are getting additional profits by; • By the use of market power • Establish some kind of agreement • Cartels among themselves. • Large firms use their power to exploit consumers by agreeing price above cost causing increase in concentration and profitability.

  16. Demsetz’s View • 2. superior efficiency of the larger firm driving down cost, causing increase in concentration and profitability. • Demsetz disagrees with the first reasoning. • It cannot be large firm getting together to agree on price and driving price above costs, because the smaller firms will also benefit. • Hence, smaller firms ROR will also increase.

  17. Demsetz’s View • He concluded that higher ROR and greater profitability of the bigger firms is not due to collusion but because of higher efficiency. • The process which the firm and consumers will gain in the long run. • Scherer (1970) however, agrees with the earlier alternative link from concentration to profitability.

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