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Cementing Relationships: Vertical Integration, Foreclosure, Productivity, and Prices

July 2006

Working Paper Number:

CES-06-21

Abstract

This paper looks at the reasons for and results of vertical integration, with specific regard to its possible effects on market power as proposed in the theoretical literature on foreclosure. It uses a rich data set on producers in the cement and ready-mixed concrete industries over a 34- year period to perform a detailed case study. There is little evidence that foreclosure effects are quantitatively important in these industries. Instead, prices fall, quantities rise, and entry rates remain unchanged when markets become more integrated. We suggest an alternative mechanism that is consistent with these patterns and provide additional evidence in support of it: namely, that higher productivity producers are more likely to vertically integrate, and as has been documented elsewhere, are also larger, more likely to grow and survive, and charge lower prices. We explore possible sources of vertically integrated producers' productivity advantage and find that the advantage is tied to firm size, possibly in part through improved logistics coordination, but not to several other possible explanations.

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investment, market, gain, merger, acquisition, leverage, monopolistic, efficiency, profit, economically, yield, externality, rent, sourcing

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:
Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Science Foundation, Metropolitan Statistical Area, Total Factor Productivity, Labor Productivity, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Federal Trade Commission, University of Chicago, Department of Economics, Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics, Chicago Census Research Data Center, NBER Summer Institute, Washington University, New York University, Council of Economic Advisers, Special Sworn Status, Herfindahl Hirschman Index, TFPR, TFPQ, Herfindahl-Hirschman

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