Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Industry Concentration: Is It Rising Overall? [feedly]

Tim Taylor drills down on measures of monopoly, or industrial concentration. As usual, appearance and reality are not quite joined!! Thus the need for economic 'science'/

Industry Concentration: Is It Rising Overall?

https://conversableeconomist.wpcomstaging.com/2021/06/21/industry-concentration-is-it-rising-overall/

One of the simplest ways to measure the degree of competition in an industry is the "four-firm concentration ratio." Take the market share of the four largest firms in the industry. Add them up. You've done it! For example, an industry where the biggest four firms each have 10% of the market would have a four-firm concentration of 40 percent. As a very rough rule of thumb, a four-firm ratio above 80 percent is commonly considered to be "high," while a four-firm ratio of 50 to 80 percent is medium, and a ratio below 50 percent would be considered "low."

Of course, one can immediately raise a number of concerns with this simple measure, which is why economists often use either a slightly more complex formula called the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index, or instead just skip past these overall measures of industry concentration and instead work with more detailed models of individual markets. In addition, when talking about industry concentration, a key question is always how one defines the relevant market. For example, does the measure of industry concentration look only at US firms, or also at imports? Is the measure of industry concentration looking at market share across the entire country, or at market shares within certain regions: for example, if there are only three or four big supermarkets chains near where I live, it's may not matter much for practical competition that there are also completely different big supermarket chains in other regions.

The economic field of industrial organization spends a substantial chunk of its mental energy trying to think through alternative measures of concentration in a variety of contexts. Here, I want to make a simpler point. If there is a large and widespread increase in industry concentration in the US economy, it should presumably show up even in a relatively crude measure like the four-firm concentration index.

Every five years the US Census Bureau does an "economic census," which is a census of firms in the economy. The most recent economic census was done in 2017, and the results are being released over time as they are tabulated. In December 2020, detailed data on four-firm concentration ratios by industry was released. Robert D. Atkinson and Filipe Lage de Sousa summarize the results in "No, Monopoly Has Not Grown" (Information Technology & Innovation Foundation, often known as ITIF, June 7, 2021)

To understand the specific measure being used here, you need to know that the Economic Census classifies firms according to what is called the NAICS, which stands for North American Industry Classification System. The NAICS starts off by classifying industries into big categories, which are then subdivided into smaller group, and then subdivided again, and again, and again. The biggest categories are called "two-digit"–for example, manufacturing categories all start with a 31, 32, or 33. The three-digit category 335 is "Electrical Equipment, Appliance, and Component Manufacturing." The four-digit category 3352 is "Household Appliance Manufacturing." And continuing down the chain, 33510 is "Small Appliance Manufacturing" while 33520 is "Major Household Appliance Manufacturing."

Obviously, when looking at the extent of competition in an industry, it makes sense to look at the greatest possible level of detail. Not all two-digit manufacturing firms will compete against each other. But "Small Appliance Manufacturing" firms are likely to have similar product line–or the ability to shift easily into similar product lines when it seems profitable to do so. The NAICS divides the US economy into 850 six-digit categories. Thus, a logical question when asking about industry concentration is to look at the extent of concentration and shifts in concentration across these 850 categories.

Here's the overall breakdown from the ITIF report on level of concentration in 2017 as measured by the four-firm ratio:

One can then compare this level of concentration with the level found in the 2002 Economic Census. Here's are some results of such a comparison from the ITIF report:

  • Despite widespread claims of widespread monopolization, just 4 percent of U.S. industries are highly concentrated, and the share of industries with low levels of concentration grew by around 25 percent from 2002 to 2017.
  • Overall, Census data show U.S. industries have not become more concentrated: The average C4 ratio (the share of sales that the top four firms capture in an industry) increased just 1 percentage point from 2002 to 2017.
  • The more concentrated industries were in 2002, the more likely they were to become less concentrated by 2017.
  • Prices rose less in industries with higher levels of concentration than they did in the overall economy from 2002 to 2017.
  • There was no relationship between industry concentration and profitability in that period.

I am of course aware that the message of this report runs counter to a wave of claims that there has been a large wave of increased concentration of industry in the United States. But as I have pointed out in the past, these claims about a a meaningful overall increase in industry concentration have been open to question. When you look more closely, it often turns out that the increase in concentration is that the share of the biggest four firms as measured at the six-digit NAICS level rose from, say, 20% to 25%, which is not likely to bring about a meaningful decrease in the extent of competition.

Pointing out specific concerns about lack of competition in certain industries or the growth of certain firms–say, antitrust issues raised by some of the big tech companies–does not prove that there has been an overall decrease in competition for the economy as a whole. The overall lesson here, perhaps, is to focus attention on specific companies and industries that raise concerns about lack of competition, but to be quite cautious about overall claims that competition has increased more broadly in all sectors.


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Monday, June 28, 2021

The Shrinking US Role in World Car Markets [feedly]

The Shrinking US Role in World Car Markets
https://conversableeconomist.wpcomstaging.com/2021/06/25/the-shrinking-us-role-in-world-car-markets/

Within the US, I often find a widespread sense that what happens in US (and perhaps also European) car markets will be the key factor in shaping world car markets. But that's highly unlikely to be true. The US accounted for 62% of all global car registrations in 1960. Even by 2000, the US included 22% of all global car registrations. But by 2018, the US share of global car registrations was 11% and still falling. The US and European car markets are essentially stagnant in terms of total quantity of cars, but rapid growth in cars is happening in the rest of the world, including in China.

The estimates of the US share of global car registration is from the latest version of the Transportation Energy Data Book, put together by Stacy C. Davis and Robert G. Boundy for Oak Ridge National Laboratory (vol. 39, updated April 2021). Here's some other data from that volume.

This table shows car production by country for 2000 and 2018. The US now runs a distant fourth, behind China, Japan, and and Germany, just ahead of India, Brazil, and Spain.

This figure shows total ownership of cars, comparing 1960, 2000, and 2018. Here, the US still runs second, behind China, but of course this is in part because of the much larger US population compared to most of the other countries listed here. It's also true that US cars are lasting much longer, so the gap between annual production and total ownership has risen. For example, in the US back in 1970, half the cars on the road were four years old or younger, and only 2.9% of cars on the road were 15 years old or more. In 2018, only about one-quarter of the cars on the road were four years old or less, and 19% of the cars on the road were 15 years old or more.

Of course, the fundamental driver of the rising share of global car production and usage outside the US is a result of faster-growing economies in those places. How much farther do other countries have to go before they begin to approach US levels of car ownership?

This figure helps put US car ownership in perspective with other countries. The dark line in the figure shows US vehicles per 1000 people over time from 1900 to the present. In the upper right, you can see how this measure flattens out for the US in recent decades. Then the car ownership of other nations per 1000 people is plotted on this same line. Thus, you can see that Canada in 2018, or western Europe in 2018, had about the same number of vehicles per 1000 population as the US had in the early 1970s. Further down the line, you can see that Mexico in 2018 had about the same number of vehicles per 1000 population as the US had in 1950.

What about China and India and others? To see where they are on this line, the second figure is a blow-up of the bottom left corner of the above figure. Here, the rise in US car consumption goes only from 1900 to 1930. You can see that Brazil's vehicle ownership in the 2018 was at about the same level (per 1000 population) as the United States in the late 1920s, while China's vehicle ownership in 2018 per 1,000 people was at about the US level of the early 1920s.

In short, the future of the global car industry in terms of sales and technology and how automotive technology affects the world's environment is going to be written largely outside US borders. A just-released study of demand for cars in China found an income elasticity of demand for cars in China of 2.5: that is, every 10% rise in incomes in China (roughly what has been happening every year or so) has been leading to a 25% rise in quantity of cars demanded.


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