The Poverty Effects of Market Concentration

This paper contributes to the limited literature on the welfare impacts of market concentration by developing a simple model that shows how exogenous variations in market power affect poverty. Increased market power leads to economy-wide welfare losses, because it raises the prices of goods and services for all agents in an economy and thus reduces the relative incomes of households, particularly among the poor. Declines in poverty in this context are only possible in the case wherein the poor have access to a share of oligopolistic rents. Although this scenario seems highly unlikely, this result has important implications for public policy, particularly for economies with less-than-perfect markets and social objectives of poverty eradication. This result suggest the possibility of taxing extranormal rents extracted by firms with market power and redistributing them through targeted lump-sum social transfers, thereby contributing to poverty reduction by mitigating welfare losses from the negative price effect.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rodriguez Castelan, Carlos
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2015-12
Subjects:PROFIT MAXIMIZATION, OLIGOPOLISTIC MARKET, RETAILING, MARKET STRUCTURE, TRADE CREDIT, DEMAND FUNCTIONS, INCOME, GUARANTEES, PERFECT COMPETITION, MARGINAL COST, EXCHANGE, UTILITY MAXIMIZATION, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, TAX COLLECTION, MARGINAL PRODUCT, POLITICAL ECONOMY, REVENUES, RETAILING INDUSTRY, WELFARE, INCENTIVES, EQUILIBRIUM, DISTRIBUTION, MODELS, PRICING, PRICE, TAX, OWNERSHIP, PRODUCT QUALITY, INCOME TAX, WEALTH, INTERNATIONAL BANK, ECONOMIC STRUCTURES, DEVELOPING COUNTRY, OLIGOPOLY, RETAIL, LABOR MARKET, MARKET ENTRY, PRICE STRUCTURE, CONSUMER SURPLUS, MARKET CONCENTRATION, GOVERNMENT POLICY, DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, PUBLIC FUNDS, INCOME INEQUALITY, SURPLUS, PRODUCTIVITY, COST OF LIVING, OPTIONS, GLOBALIZATION, FAILURES, MONETARY FUND, MONOPOLY, BARRIERS TO ENTRY, INCOME EFFECTS, MARKETS, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, ENTRY BARRIERS, COMPETITIVE MARKET, ECONOMIC POLICIES, PRODUCT, UTILITY, NOMINAL INCOME, EXOGENOUS INCOME, FINANCE, ECONOMIC RESEARCH, TAX POLICIES, CONSUMER GROUPS, TAXES, EXPENDITURE, EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS, EQUITY, CONSUMPTION, SURPLUSES, SUBSTITUTE, GOOD, WAGES, COMPETITION POLICY, MARKET FAILURES, VALUE, RETAIL STORES, CREDIT, DEMAND, WELFARE ANALYSIS, UTILITY FUNCTION, AGGREGATE DEMAND, DEMAND FUNCTION, INEFFICIENCY, ECONOMY, CONSUMERS, PROPERTY, PRICE EFFECT, MEASUREMENT, SHARES, MARKET, INCOME EFFECT, POLICY, MARKET COMPETITION, HOMOGENEOUS GOOD, MARKET YIELDS, FUNCTIONAL FORMS, TAXATION, PARTIAL EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS, TRADE, GOODS, THEORY, GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS, INDUSTRIAL ECONOMICS, INVESTMENT, LOWER PRICES, SHARE, INVESTMENT CLIMATE, MONOPOLISTIC MARKET, POVERTY, MARKET CONCENTRATIONS, SUPPLY, COMPETITIVE MARKETS, MARKET POWER, POLICY IMPLICATIONS, REVENUE, PROFIT, CONSUMER PRICES, OFFSETS, PROFITS, COMMODITY PRICES, OUTCOMES, POSITIVE EFFECTS, PRICES, DEMOCRATIC PROCESSES, DEVELOPMENT BANK, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, COMPETITION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/12/25672296/poverty-effects-market-concentration
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/23479
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!