CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'monopolistic'

The following papers contain search terms that you selected. From the papers listed below, you can navigate to the PDF, the profile page for that working paper, or see all the working papers written by an author. You can also explore tags, keywords, and authors that occur frequently within these papers.
Click here to search again

Frequently Occurring Concepts within this Search

Center for Economic Studies - 28

Total Factor Productivity - 24

Ordinary Least Squares - 22

North American Industry Classification System - 22

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 18

Longitudinal Business Database - 17

National Bureau of Economic Research - 16

Standard Industrial Classification - 14

Census of Manufactures - 13

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 13

Economic Census - 12

National Science Foundation - 12

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 10

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 10

Special Sworn Status - 10

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 9

Federal Reserve Bank - 9

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 9

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 8

Disclosure Review Board - 7

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 7

Longitudinal Research Database - 7

Internal Revenue Service - 6

Cobb-Douglas - 6

Harvard University - 6

Harmonized System - 6

TFPQ - 6

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 6

Herfindahl-Hirschman - 5

Federal Reserve System - 5

Decennial Census - 5

Employer Identification Numbers - 5

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 5

TFPR - 5

University of Chicago - 5

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 4

Federal Trade Commission - 4

Boston College - 4

New York University - 4

Business Register - 4

Labor Productivity - 4

State Energy Data System - 4

Department of Economics - 4

World Bank - 4

Business Dynamics Statistics - 3

Technical Services - 3

Foreign Direct Investment - 3

European Union - 3

European Commission - 3

University of Toronto - 3

Generalized Method of Moments - 3

Accommodation and Food Services - 3

Census Bureau Business Register - 3

Business Services - 3

Wholesale Trade - 3

Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 3

NBER Summer Institute - 3

Energy Information Administration - 3

Commodity Flow Survey - 3

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 3

American Economic Review - 3

Administrative Records - 3

market - 33

production - 23

macroeconomic - 20

manufacturing - 19

industrial - 19

export - 17

demand - 17

econometric - 16

sale - 15

produce - 14

economically - 14

revenue - 13

growth - 12

gdp - 12

price - 12

import - 11

sector - 11

economist - 9

profit - 9

exporter - 9

oligopolistic - 9

tariff - 9

innovation - 8

monopolistically - 8

expenditure - 8

cost - 8

pricing - 8

investment - 7

multinational - 7

competitor - 7

commodity - 7

manufacturer - 6

exporting - 6

regional - 6

endogeneity - 6

heterogeneity - 6

productivity growth - 6

recession - 6

good - 6

exported - 5

merger - 5

oligopoly - 5

specialization - 5

region - 5

spillover - 5

labor - 5

econometrician - 5

trading - 5

industry productivity - 5

product - 5

earnings - 4

employ - 4

firms productivity - 4

estimation - 4

competitiveness - 4

factory - 4

country - 4

productivity dispersion - 4

externality - 4

area - 4

estimating - 4

company - 4

growth productivity - 4

efficiency - 4

leverage - 4

consumption - 4

patent - 3

patenting - 3

acquisition - 3

shipment - 3

subsidy - 3

export market - 3

relocation - 3

international trade - 3

foreign - 3

globalization - 3

depreciation - 3

reallocation productivity - 3

geographically - 3

city - 3

wages productivity - 3

labor markets - 3

industry concentration - 3

importer - 3

firms import - 3

average - 3

wholesale - 3

enterprise - 3

substitute - 3

prices products - 3

advantage - 3

trade costs - 3

consumer - 3

supplier - 3

trade models - 3

custom - 3

dispersion productivity - 3

rate - 3

plants industries - 3

endogenous - 3

exogenous - 3

quantity - 3

disparity - 3

profitability - 3

Viewing papers 31 through 40 of 53


  • Working Paper

    THE TRADABILITY OF SERVICES: GEOGRAPHIC CONCENTRATION AND TRADE COSTS

    March 2014

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-14-03

    We develop a methodology for estimating the 'tradability' of goods and services using data on U.S. establishments. Our results show that the average service industry is less tradable than the average manufacturing industry. However, there is considerable within-sector variation in estimated tradability and many service industries are as tradable as manufacturing. Tradable service industries account for a significant share of economic activity and workers employed in those industries have relatively high average wages. Counterfactual analysis indicates that the potential welfare gains from policy liberalization in service trade are of the same order of magnitude as liberalization in the manufacturing sector.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    INNOVATION, REALLOCATION AND GROWTH

    April 2013

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-13-23

    We build a model of firm-level innovation, productivity growth and reallocation featuring endogenous entry and exit. A key feature is the selection between high- and low-type firms, which differ in terms of their innovative capacity. We estimate the parameters of the model using detailed US Census micro data on firm-level output, R&D and patenting. The model provides a good fit to the dynamics of firm entry and exit, output and R&D, and its implied elasticities are in the ballpark of a range of micro estimates. We find industrial policy subsidizing either the R&D or the continued operation of incumbents reduces growth and welfare. For example, a subsidy to incumbent R&D equivalent to 53 of GDP reduces welfare by about 1.53 because it deters entry of new high-type firms. On the contrary, substantial improvements (of the order of 53 improvement in welfare) are possible if the continued operation of incumbents is taxed while at the same time R&D by incumbents and new entrants is subsidized. This is because of a strong selection effect: R&D resources (skilled labor) are inefficiently used by low-type incumbent firms. Subsidies to incumbents encourage the survival and expansion of these firms at the expense of potential high-type entrants. We show that optimal policy encourages the exit of low-type firms and supports R&D by high-type incumbents and entry.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Materials Prices and Productivity

    June 2012

    Authors: Enghin Atalay

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-12-11

    There is substantial within-industry variation, even within industries that use and produce homogeneous inputs and outputs, in the prices that plants pay for their material inputs. I explore, using plant-level data from the U.S. Census Bureau, the consequences and sources of this variation in materials prices. For a sample of industries with relatively homogeneous products, the standard deviation of plant-level productivities would be 7% lower if all plants faced the same materials prices. Moreover, plant-level materials prices are both persistent across time and predictive of exit. The contribution of net entry to aggregate productivity growth is smaller for productivity measures that strip out di'erences in materials prices. After documenting these patterns, I discuss three potential sources of materials price variation: geography, di'erences in suppliers. marginal costs, and suppliers. price discriminatory behavior. Together, these variables account for 13% of the dispersion of materials prices. Finally, I demonstrate that plants.marginal costs are correlated with the marginal costs of their intermediate input suppliers.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Export Prices of U.S. Firms

    December 2011

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-11-42

    Using confidential firm-level data from the United States in 2002, we show that exporting firms charge prices for narrowly defined goods that differ substantially with the characteristics of firms and export markets. We control for selection into export markets using a three-stage estimator. We have three main results. First, we find that that highly productive and skill intensive firms charge higher prices, while capital-intensive firms charge lower prices. Second, the very large correlation between distance and export prices found by Baldwin and Harrigan (2011) is largely due to a composition effect. Third, U.S. firms charge slightly higher prices to larger and richer markets, and substantially higher prices to markets other than Canada and Mexico.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Cyclicality of Productivity Dispersion

    May 2011

    Authors: Matthias Kehrig

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-11-15

    Using plant-level data, I show that the dispersion of total factor productivity in U.S. durable manufacturing is greater in recessions than in booms. This cyclical property of productivity dispersion is much less pronounced in non-durable manufacturing. In durables, this phenomenon primarily reflects a relatively higher share of unproductive firms in a recession. In order to interpret these findings, I construct a business cycle model where production in durables requires a fixed input. In a boom, when the market price of this fixed input is high, only more productive firms enter and only more productive incumbents survive, which results in a more compressed productivity distribution. The resulting higher average productivity in durables endogenously translates into a lower average relative price of durables. Additionally, my model is consistent with the following business cycle facts: procyclical entry, procyclical aggregate total factor productivity, more procyclicality in durable than non-durable output, procyclical employment and countercyclicality in the relative price of durables and the cross section of stock returns.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Entry, Exit, and the Determinants of Market Structure

    September 2009

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-09-23

    Market structure is determined by the entry and exit decisions of individual producers. These decisions are driven by expectations of future profits which, in turn, depend on the nature of competition within the market. In this paper we estimate a dynamic, structural model of entry and exit in an oligopolistic industry and use it to quantify the determinants of market structure and long-run firm values for two U.S. service industries, dentists and chiropractors. We find that entry costs faced by potential entrants, fixed costs faced by incumbent producers, and the toughness of short-run price competition are all important determinants of long run firm values and market structure. As the number of firms in the market increases, the value of continuing in the market and the value of entering the market both decline, the probability of exit rises, and the probability of entry declines. The magnitude of these effects differ substantially across markets due to differences in exogenous cost and demand factors and across the dentist and chiropractor industries. Simulations using the estimated model for the dentist industry show that pressure from both potential entrants and incumbent firms discipline long-run profits. We calculate that a seven percent reduction in the mean sunk entry cost would reduce a monopolist's long-run profits by the same amount as if the firm operated in a duopoly.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Testing for Factor Price Equality in the Presence of Unobserved Factor Quality Diferences

    August 2009

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-09-22

    We develop a method for identifying departures from relative factor price equality across regions that is valid under general assumptions about production, markets and factors. Application of this method to the United States reveals substantial and increasing deviations in relative skilled wages across labor markets in both 1972 and 1992. These deviations vary systematically with labor markets .industry structure both in the cross section and over time.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

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

    December 2008

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-41

    This paper empirically investigates the possible market power effects of vertical integration proposed in the theoretical literature on vertical foreclosure. It uses a rich data set of cement and ready-mixed concrete plants that spans several decades to perform a detailed case study. There is little evidence that foreclosure is quantitatively important in these industries. Instead, prices fall, quantities rise, and entry rates remain unchanged when markets become more integrated. These patterns are consistent, however, with an alternative efficiency-based mechanism. Namely, higher productivity producers are more likely to vertically integrate and are also larger, more likely to survive, and charge lower prices. We find evidence that integrated producers' productivity advantage is tied to improved logistics coordination afforded by large local concrete operations. Interestingly, this benefit is not due to firms' vertical structures per se: non-vertical firms with large local concrete operations have similarly high productivity levels.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Multi-Product Firms and Product Switching

    August 2008

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-24

    This paper examines the frequency, pervasiveness and determinants of product switching by U.S. manufacturing firms. We find that one-half of firms alter their mix of five-digit SIC products every five years, that product switching is correlated with both firm- and firm-product attributes, and that product adding and dropping induce large changes in firm scope. The behavior we observe is consistent with a natural generalization of existing theories of industry dynamics that incorporates endogenous product selection within firms. Our findings suggest that product switching contributes to a reallocation of resources within firms towards their most efficient use.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Regional Industrial Dominance, Agglomeration Economies, and Manufacturing Plant Productivity

    December 2007

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-07-31

    In a seminal article, Benjamin Chinitz (1961) focused attention on the effects that industry size, structure, and economic diversification have on firm performance and regional economies. He also raised a related but conceptually distinct question that has been overlooked since: how does the extent to which a regional industry is concentrated in a single or small number of firms impact the performance of other local firms within that industry? He suggested that such regional industrial dominance may impact input prices, limit capital accessibility, deter entrepreneurial activity, and reduce the regional availability of agglomeration economies such as specialized labor and supply pools In this paper, we use an establishment-level production function to quantify the links between industrial dominance, agglomeration economies, and firm performance. We consider two questions. First, do greater levels of regional industrial dominance lead to lower economic performance by small, dominated manufacturing plants? Second, are small plants in dominated regional industries more limited in capturing regional agglomeration benefits and therefore do they face rigidities in deploying production factors to maximum advantage? Our results suggest that regional industrial organization does influence productivity but that the effect tends to be a direct one, rather than an indirect effect via its influence on agglomeration economies.
    View Full Paper PDF