Tuesday April 13, 2021
10.00-12.00
“Mark-up Estimation: Issues, Methods and Policy implications” by Werner Roeger, DIW Berlin and VIVES (University of Leuven, Belgium)
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There is renewed interest in mark-up estimates given recent empirical results suggesting rising trends at a global level.
The presentation will focus on two issues. First, how robust is the empirical evidence and second what are the possible reasons for rising mark-ups. There are essentially two opposing views. According to one view, rising mark-ups are a clear signal of rising market power. Another view - prominent in the IO literature – sees a stronger link between markups and technological changes associated with rising fixed/sunk costs. Concerning methodology, Werner Roeger will focus on the method developed by de Loecker et al (2015) and a method first suggested by Hall (1988) and recently extended by Abraham et al. (2020) to jointly estimate markups and fixed costs. After a broad review of results at a global level, Werner Roeger will provide a comparison between the two methods for a Belgian firm panel data set. Belgian data are especially useful for such a comparison since this dataset provides a break-down of intermediates into material and service inputs. This offers useful information for estimating marginal cost. Mark-up References W. Roeger (1995). Can imperfect competition explain the difference between primal and dual productivity measures? Estimates for US manufacturing. Journal of Political Economy, 103, pp. 316-330, 1995. By invitation only. Contact : conferencescepii.fr |