Firm Dynamics, Market Power and Productivity Puzzles

Lead Research Organisation: University of Kent
Department Name: Sch of Economics

Abstract

Nobel laureate Paul Krugman famously remarked that 'productivity isn't everything, but in the long run it is almost everything'. He is referring to the idea that productivity dictates society's ability to produce more output from a given amount of inputs, for example, more crops from a given amount of land. Ultimately, sustained productivity improvement increases society's health and living standards and offers future generations a better life.
After the 2007 financial crisis, UK labour productivity fell four per cent in two years, only returning in 2015. In 2015 productivity was 16% below the level it would have been if pre-crisis trends had continued. But the causes of this weak productivity performance are not fully understood. This is called the UK's productivity puzzle.
Our research explores this productivity puzzle and investigates a new explanation for UK productivity behaviour. We study whether a rise in market dominance has weakened productivity. Greater market dominance, which economists call 'market power', allows firms to charge higher prices which can weaken productivity. Using data on UK firms, we statistically analyse UK market power and its relationship to productivity.
Traditionally policymakers analyse competition in each industry of the economy independently. But increasingly research is recognizing the overall impact that market power can have on an economy. This is crucial in the UK at a time when it moves away from the EU, which influenced competition policy, and at a time when disruptive technologies are creating new industries with dominant firms and few competitors.

Planned Impact

The main impact will be through research circulated to academic, policy and other research organizations. The primary channel of communication with academic audiences will be through working drafts, seminar presentations and conference participation. We will also seek to disseminate our work among policy audiences using presentations and working papers. Potential audiences are BEIS, CMA, HMT, and the Bank of England. We plan to engage with non-academic research organisations that influence public debate such as think-tanks like NIESR. Lastly, our research can trickle-down to impact students of economics. The topics we address put a contemporary lens on theory, such as market power and productivity, that is studied in A-level, undergraduate and postgraduate syllabuses.

Publications

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Anthony Savagar (2020) Market Power and TFP in the UK

 
Description We improve our understanding of market power in the UK economy and its relationship to productivity.

We provide econometric estimates of price markups in the UK economy and relate them to productivity measures.

Our results show that markups increase in the UK economy at the same time as productivity plateaued.
Exploitation Route We have disseminated our research findings among relevant policy makers.

We have developed a code base for estimating markups on UK secure data provided by the ONS.
Sectors Government, Democracy and Justice

 
Description Our research has informed presentations and discussions with policymakers at the central bank and in the civil service.
First Year Of Impact 2019
Sector Other
Impact Types Economic

 
Title Markups code 
Description Code base in Stata to estimate price markups in the UK using production function estimation techniques. 
Type Of Material Data analysis technique 
Year Produced 2020 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact NA