Corporate Market Power in Romania

This paper explores firm-level heterogeneity to identify the underlying drivers of market power trends in Romania and the implications for competition and economic growth. The results show that the (sales-weighted) average markup in Romania increased by around 15 percent between 2008 and 2017. A key driving force behind this aggregate trend was the ability of a small fraction of firms -- the top decile firms in the markup distribution -- to increase their markups. These firms do not seem to follow the typical superstar firms' profile: they are smaller, less efficient, and less likely to invest in intangible assets than other firms in the markup distribution and overrepresented in less knowledge-intensive service sectors (for example, the retail and trade sector). This suggests that the increase in markups in Romania might be associated with an environment that is less conducive to competition. A decomposition exercise shows that the increase in aggregate markups has been driven mostly by incumbents rather than new entrants and exiting firms, which could be interpreted as a sign of consolidation of market power among existing firms. The paper also finds that certain firm characteristics matter to explain differences in markup performance: size, age, research and development profile, export propensity, location, and especially ownership. Further, the paper shows that additional productivity dividends are associated with increased competition in Romania. Overall, these findings illustrate potential policy angles that need to be tackled to enhance market contestability and boost productivity growth, such as addressing regulations that restrict entry and rivalry in the retail trade sector, which concentrates a substantial proportion of high-markup firms, as well as promoting competitive neutrality across markets where public and private actors compete.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pop, Georgiana, Iootty, Mariana, Pena, Jorge
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020-12
Subjects:MARKET POWER, COMPETITION, PRODUCTIVITY, RESOURCE ALLOCATION, COMPETITION POLICY, EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS, BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT, REGULATION, STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/845981607007573350/Corporate-Market-Power-in-Romania-Assessing-Recent-Trends-Drivers-and-Implications-for-Competition
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/34909
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098634909
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986349092024-06-23T06:02:54Z Corporate Market Power in Romania Assessing Recent Trends, Drivers, and Implications for Competition Pop, Georgiana Iootty, Mariana Pena, Jorge MARKET POWER COMPETITION PRODUCTIVITY RESOURCE ALLOCATION COMPETITION POLICY EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT REGULATION STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES This paper explores firm-level heterogeneity to identify the underlying drivers of market power trends in Romania and the implications for competition and economic growth. The results show that the (sales-weighted) average markup in Romania increased by around 15 percent between 2008 and 2017. A key driving force behind this aggregate trend was the ability of a small fraction of firms -- the top decile firms in the markup distribution -- to increase their markups. These firms do not seem to follow the typical superstar firms' profile: they are smaller, less efficient, and less likely to invest in intangible assets than other firms in the markup distribution and overrepresented in less knowledge-intensive service sectors (for example, the retail and trade sector). This suggests that the increase in markups in Romania might be associated with an environment that is less conducive to competition. A decomposition exercise shows that the increase in aggregate markups has been driven mostly by incumbents rather than new entrants and exiting firms, which could be interpreted as a sign of consolidation of market power among existing firms. The paper also finds that certain firm characteristics matter to explain differences in markup performance: size, age, research and development profile, export propensity, location, and especially ownership. Further, the paper shows that additional productivity dividends are associated with increased competition in Romania. Overall, these findings illustrate potential policy angles that need to be tackled to enhance market contestability and boost productivity growth, such as addressing regulations that restrict entry and rivalry in the retail trade sector, which concentrates a substantial proportion of high-markup firms, as well as promoting competitive neutrality across markets where public and private actors compete. 2020-12-10T15:01:33Z 2020-12-10T15:01:33Z 2020-12 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/845981607007573350/Corporate-Market-Power-in-Romania-Assessing-Recent-Trends-Drivers-and-Implications-for-Competition https://hdl.handle.net/10986/34909 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9487 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic MARKET POWER
COMPETITION
PRODUCTIVITY
RESOURCE ALLOCATION
COMPETITION POLICY
EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
REGULATION
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
MARKET POWER
COMPETITION
PRODUCTIVITY
RESOURCE ALLOCATION
COMPETITION POLICY
EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
REGULATION
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
spellingShingle MARKET POWER
COMPETITION
PRODUCTIVITY
RESOURCE ALLOCATION
COMPETITION POLICY
EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
REGULATION
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
MARKET POWER
COMPETITION
PRODUCTIVITY
RESOURCE ALLOCATION
COMPETITION POLICY
EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
REGULATION
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
Pop, Georgiana
Iootty, Mariana
Pena, Jorge
Corporate Market Power in Romania
description This paper explores firm-level heterogeneity to identify the underlying drivers of market power trends in Romania and the implications for competition and economic growth. The results show that the (sales-weighted) average markup in Romania increased by around 15 percent between 2008 and 2017. A key driving force behind this aggregate trend was the ability of a small fraction of firms -- the top decile firms in the markup distribution -- to increase their markups. These firms do not seem to follow the typical superstar firms' profile: they are smaller, less efficient, and less likely to invest in intangible assets than other firms in the markup distribution and overrepresented in less knowledge-intensive service sectors (for example, the retail and trade sector). This suggests that the increase in markups in Romania might be associated with an environment that is less conducive to competition. A decomposition exercise shows that the increase in aggregate markups has been driven mostly by incumbents rather than new entrants and exiting firms, which could be interpreted as a sign of consolidation of market power among existing firms. The paper also finds that certain firm characteristics matter to explain differences in markup performance: size, age, research and development profile, export propensity, location, and especially ownership. Further, the paper shows that additional productivity dividends are associated with increased competition in Romania. Overall, these findings illustrate potential policy angles that need to be tackled to enhance market contestability and boost productivity growth, such as addressing regulations that restrict entry and rivalry in the retail trade sector, which concentrates a substantial proportion of high-markup firms, as well as promoting competitive neutrality across markets where public and private actors compete.
format Working Paper
topic_facet MARKET POWER
COMPETITION
PRODUCTIVITY
RESOURCE ALLOCATION
COMPETITION POLICY
EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
REGULATION
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
author Pop, Georgiana
Iootty, Mariana
Pena, Jorge
author_facet Pop, Georgiana
Iootty, Mariana
Pena, Jorge
author_sort Pop, Georgiana
title Corporate Market Power in Romania
title_short Corporate Market Power in Romania
title_full Corporate Market Power in Romania
title_fullStr Corporate Market Power in Romania
title_full_unstemmed Corporate Market Power in Romania
title_sort corporate market power in romania
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020-12
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/845981607007573350/Corporate-Market-Power-in-Romania-Assessing-Recent-Trends-Drivers-and-Implications-for-Competition
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/34909
work_keys_str_mv AT popgeorgiana corporatemarketpowerinromania
AT ioottymariana corporatemarketpowerinromania
AT penajorge corporatemarketpowerinromania
AT popgeorgiana assessingrecenttrendsdriversandimplicationsforcompetition
AT ioottymariana assessingrecenttrendsdriversandimplicationsforcompetition
AT penajorge assessingrecenttrendsdriversandimplicationsforcompetition
_version_ 1802820777995665408