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The Rise of Market Power and the Macroeconomic Implications

TLDR
This article studied the evolution of market power based on firm-level data for the U.S. economy since 1955 and measured both markups and profitability, and discussed the macroeconomic implications of an increase in average market power, which can account for a number of secular trends in the past four decades.
Abstract
We document the evolution of market power based on firm-level data for the U.S. economy since 1955. We measure both markups and profitability. In 1980, aggregate markups start to rise from 21% above marginal cost to 61% now. The increase is driven mainly by the upper tail of the markup distribution: the upper percentiles have increased sharply. Quite strikingly, the median is unchanged. In addition to the fattening upper tail of the markup distribution, there is reallocation of market share from low- to high-markup firms. This rise occurs mostly within industry. We also find an increase in the average profit rate from 1% to 8%. Although there is also an increase in overhead costs, the markup increase is in excess of overhead. We discuss the macroeconomic implications of an increase in average market power, which can account for a number of secular trends in the past four decades, most notably the declining labor and capital shares as well as the decrease in labor market dynamism.

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The fall of the labor share and the rise of superstar firms

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The Cyclical Behavior of the Price-Cost Markup

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Declining Labor and Capital Shares

Simcha Barkai
- 01 Oct 2020 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the decline in the labor share over the past 30 years was not offset by an increase in the capital share, and that a decline in competition is necessary to generate simultaneous declines in both labor and capital shares.
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Productivity and Misallocation in General Equilibrium

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a general non-parametric formula for aggregating microeconomic shocks in general equilibrium economies with distortions such as taxes, markups, frictions to resource reallocation, and nominal rigidities, and derive a formula showing how these two components are determined by structural microeconomic parameters such as elasticities of substitution, returns to scale, factor mobility, and network linkages.
References
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Automobile prices in market equilibrium

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed techniques for empirically analyzing demand and supply in differentiated products markets and then applied these techniques to analyze equilibrium in the U.S. automobile industry.
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The Dynamics of Productivity in the Telecommunications Equipment Industry

G. Steven Olley, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1996 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, an empirical focus is on estimating the parameters of a production function for the equipment industry, and then using those estimates to analyze the evolution of plant-level productivity.
ReportDOI

Misallocation and Manufacturing TFP in China and India

TL;DR: This paper measured sizable gaps in marginal products of labor and capital across plants within narrowly defined industries in China and India compared with the United States, and calculated manufacturing TFP gains of 30%-50% in China, and 40%-60% in India.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why has CEO Pay Increased So Much

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a simple equilibrium model of CEO pay and found that a CEO's pay changes one for one with aggregate firm size, while changing much less with the size of his own firm.
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Getting Income Shares Right

TL;DR: The authors showed that the usual approach underestimates labor income in small firms, and several adjustments for calculating labor shares were identified and compared, yielding labor shares for most countries in the range of.65 −.80.
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