The Great Reversal

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The Great Reversal Page 37

by Thomas Philippon


  market power: and assessing competition, 25; versus demand elasticity, 26; and welfare, 27–30; concentration and rise in, 45–48; concentration hypotheses and rise in, 48–51; persistence of market shares over time and rise in, 51–53; profits of US firms and rise in, 51–53; profit margins and payouts and rise in, 54–58; China shock and rise in, 58–60; versus efficiency in merger regulation, 88–90

  market share: of Walmart, 32; persistence of, over time, 51–53. See also concentration

  market value: investment and, 67–69; of Apple, 245; of internet giants, 252

  markup, 118, 120–122

  Marquis, M., 133

  Matvos, Gregor, 220

  Maytag, 92

  McAfee, Andrew, 258

  McCain–Feingold Act (2002), 182, 186

  McDonald’s, 115–116, 117, 282

  McGrath, Conor, 161

  McKinley, William, 159

  McLaughlin, P. A., 95

  McMillan, Robert, 271

  Mediaset, 199

  Merger Guidelines, 87–88

  merger reviews, 86–88; market power versus efficiency, 88–90; in recent years, 91; of internet giants, 273–275

  mergers and acquisitions, 84–85; “killer acquisitions,” 82; foreign competition and dubious domestic, 92–93; enforcement in Europe, 146; and future of Europe’s free markets, 147–149; in health care, 231–232; limiting, by internet giants, 273–275

  Meyer, Bruce, 224

  Michaely, Roni, 47, 54–56

  Microsoft: business model of, 244; regulation of, 259–260. See also internet giants

  military dominance, 152

  Miller, Merton, 207

  minimum wage, impact on retail prices, 33–34

  Miranda, Javier, 81

  mistakes, tolerance for, 4, 295–296

  Mitterrand, François, 128

  mobile telecommunications: costs in US versus Europe, 6; deregulation of, 30–31. See also internet service; telecommunications industry

  Molyneux, Philip, 216

  money market mutual fund industry, 218–219

  Mongey, Simon, 281

  Monnet, Jean, 124, 130, 131–132, 134, 142

  monopoly power, 279–280. See also antitrust; competition

  monopoly rents, 108

  monopsony, 279–280; defined, 108; and labor market concentration, 280–282; and restricted contracts, 282; and occupational licensing, 282–283; and rise of club economy, 283–284; dangers of, 284–285

  Monti, Mario, 203

  Montialoux, Claire, 34

  morbidity, 229

  mortality, 229–230

  mortgages, government involvement in, 237–238

  Morton, Fiona, 275

  Much Ado about Nothing hypothesis, 48, 49, 53, 56

  Mullainathan, Sendhil, 220

  Mulvaney, Mick, 189

  MV / Emp ratio, 254–255

  Naidu, Suresh, 282

  National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG), 195

  national competition authorities (NCAs), 133

  national concentration indexes, 35–37

  net investment, 64–66

  net present value (NPV), 67–69

  network economics, 265–268

  network effects / externalities, 265–267

  Newberry, Truman, 181

  Noeth, Markus, 220

  Nokia, 50

  nonnormal trade relations (non-NTR) tariff, 58–59

  occupational licensing, 282–283

  OECD, 127, 136, 145

  Olley, Steven, 3

  Olson, Mancur, viii, 23

  Omarova, Saule, 269

  omitted variable bias, 180

  online gambling, 174

  online privacy, 271–273, 275–276, 277–278, 296

  opacity, in health care, 233

  opioid epidemic, 234–236

  OxyContin, 235–236

  Pacula, Rosalie Liccardo, 235–236

  Page, Larry, 256

  Pai, Ajit, 200

  Pain Care Forum, 235

  Pakes, Ariel, 3

  Patterson, Christina, 48, 50

  PBS, 153–154

  per-capita economic growth, 14–15, 100–102

  permanent normal trade relations (PNTR), granted to China, 59

  Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), 198

  Pierce, Justin R., 91

  Pigou, Arthur Cecil, 95

  Piketty, Thomas, 16

  Pinkham, Richard, 139

  PMR indexes, 125

  Polis, Jared, 259

  political action committees (PACs), 164–165, 177, 181–182, 184, 187. See also leadership PACs; super PACs

  political economy, comparison of US and European, 151–152, 164–166. See also campaign finance contributions; lobbying

  poverty, 224

  Powell, David, 235–236

  Powell, Michael, 200

  Power, Patrick, 236

  predatory pricing, 43–44

  Price, David J., 284

  price coherence, 269–271

  price comparisons, 111–112; complexity of, 112–114; and price increases, 118–123

  price discrimination, 269–271

  price hikes, 7–8

  price indexes, 41–42

  prices: competition’s impact on, 18; as indicator of competition, 25; evolution of retail trade services relative to general consumer price index, 33; minimum wage’s impact on retail, 33–34; on Amazon, 39–40; quality-adjusted, 40, 41–42; loss leader pricing, 43; predatory pricing, 43–44; impact of higher, 114; increases in US versus Europe, 118–122; in United States, 122–123; of health care, 228–229

  privacy, 271–273, 275–276, 277–278, 296

  productivity, 76–79; and price comparisons, 119; of US health care, 229–231

  product market convergence, in Europe, 144

  product market reform, in Europe, 143

  product market regulation (PMR) indexes, 125

  profit margins: of Walmart, 32–33; of Amazon, 43; and rise of market power, 54–58; in Europe, 103–106; of internet giants, 249–252

  profit payouts, and rise of market power, 54–58

  profit rates, in US and EU, 106

  profits: as indicator of competition, 25; business investment as low relative to, 63–65; in Europe, 103–106; and deregulation of US airlines, 137; and corporate income taxes, 264

  Proust, Marcel, 249

  Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), 153–154

  public choice theory on entry decline, 95–96

  public interest theory on entry decline, 95–96

  purchasing power parity (PPP), 14, 114–115, 117

  q theory, 67–71, 93

  Quidsi, 43

  Rabelais, François, 135

  Raffarin, Jean-Pierre, 147

  Rannazzisi, Joseph T., 235

  RegData, 95

  regulatory capture, 233–234

  Reinhart, Carmen, 241

  relevant market, 38

  remittances, 217

  Renkin, Tobias, 34

  rents, 20–21, 23. See also monopoly rents

  rent seeking, 156–157, 160–161

  replacement cost, 64–65, 67–69

  replacement of market shares, 52

  Reserve Primary Money Market Fund, 219

  reshuffling of market shares, 52

  resources, competition and limited, 22–23

  restricted contracts: in health care, 232–233; and monopsony power, 282

  Reuter, Jonathan, 220

  reverse causality, 171–173, 180

  revolving doors, 200–202

  Reynolds, Kara, 195

  Richter, Brian, 155, 164

  Rise of Superstar Firms hypothesis, 48, 49, 53, 61, 62, 72, 76–79, 97

  Robinson, Joan, 87, 207

  robo-advising, 220

  Rogers, Will, 176

  Rogoff, Kenneth, 241

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 159–160, 181

  Rosenthal, Howard, 29–30

  Ro
usseau, Peter L., x

  Saez, Emmanuel, 16

  Saffi, Felipe E., 163

  scale, economies of, 265, 266, 267–268

  Scharfstein, David, 214–215

  Schinkel, Maarten Pieter, 147

  Schoar, Antoinette, 220

  Schreyer, Paul, 1

  Schuman, Robert, 130

  Schuman Declaration of 1950, 130

  Schuman Plan, 130, 142

  Sears, 34–35

  Second Industrial Revolution, 15

  securities industry, 215

  Semanko, Nicholas A., 163

  Sen, Amartya, 223

  Seru, Amit, 200, 220

  service quality, competition’s impact on, 19

  Sessions, Jeff, 198

  Shapiro, Carl, 37–38

  Shcherbakov, Oleksandr, 19

  Sherman Act (1890), 86, 131

  Shin, Minchul, 163

  Shleifer, Andrei, 127

  Shum, Matthew, 19

  Sichel, Daniel, 73–74

  Siegenthaler, Michael, 34

  Single Market, 143, 145, 289

  skepticism, vii–viii

  skewness, 166–170, 178–180

  Smith, Adam, 279

  Smith–Connally Act, 182

  Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act (1930), 58–59

  Snyder, James M. Jr., 189, 191, 202

  soft money, in campaign finance contributions, 183

  software investment, 73

  Sondermann, David, 170

  Song, Jae, 284

  SpeechNow.org, 185–186, 187

  SpeechNow.org v. FEC (2010), 185–186

  Srinivasan, Dina, 275–276, 278

  Stack Overflow, 268

  Starcher, John Jr., 231

  starvation, 223

  state aid, 134–135

  state politics, in US, 195–197

  steady state, 80

  Steinbaum, Marshall, 280

  Stern, Scott, 82

  Stigler, George, 95

  stock market, “unprecedented” performance of, x–xi

  Strahan, Philip E., 216

  Stratmann, Thomas, 182, 190, 191, 195

  Stresemann, Gustav, 129

  Strickler, Laura, 235

  structure-performance-conduct paradigm, 87

  Stulz, René, 84

  Sullivan, James, 224

  supermarkets, regulation of French, 147

  super PACs, 185–186, 187–189, 198–199

  supply and demand, and endogeneity bias, 158

  Suri, Siddarth, 282

  Syverson, Chad, 31, 34

  Tabakovic, Haris, 201

  Tabarrok, A., 95

  Taft–Hartley Act, 182

  tangible investment, 73, 74

  Taska, Bledi, 280

  tax breaks, 134–135

  Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA, 2018), 264

  taxes: lobbying for lower, 163; paid by internet giants, 262–264

  taxis, 19

  technology: interaction of regulation and, 4; and US per-capita economic growth rate, 15–16; as problem-solver, 277. See also financial technology (fintech); information technologies; internet giants

  Telecommunications Act (1996), 3

  telecommunications industry: deregulation of, 3–4, 30–31, 140–141; lobbying by, 170. See also internet service; mobile telecommunications

  Tillis, Thom, 178

  Tillman Act (1907), 181

  time series evidence, 121

  Tirole, Jean, 269

  Tobin, James, 67

  Tobin’s q, 67–71, 93

  Tørsløv, T., 135

  total factor productivity (TFP) growth, 15, 31–32

  trade: international, 24; and dubious domestic mergers, 92–93

  trade associations, 183–184

  trade policy, 290–291

  Trade Talks, 92, 290–291

  transparency, 296

  Treaty of Rome (1957), 132

  Trebbi, Francesco, 162–163, 165–166, 190, 199, 200

  Trump, Donald, 92, 160–161, 180, 221

  Tufano, Peter, 220

  turnover of market shares, 52

  Uber, 19

  uncertainty, in policy decisions, 4

  United Healthcare, 234

  United States: labor share in, 107–108; labor shares in euro area and, 109; Europe as contrast to, 109–110; price increases in, 118–123; as champion of free markets, 124; differences between antitrust frameworks in Europe and, 133, 134; similarities between antitrust frameworks in Europe and, 133; deregulation in, 135–136; deregulation of airline industry in, 137, 138, 139–140; cartel enforcement in, 146–147; comparison of political economies of Europe and, 151–152, 164–166; distribution of large lobbying firms in EU and, 169–170; state politics in, 195–197; life expectancy in, 224; internet giants and economic growth in, 256–258; challenges facing, 296–297. See also health care; price comparisons

  United States v. AT&T (1974), 3

  unit labor costs (ULC), 119, 120

  US Consumer Price Index (CPI), 41–42

  US dollars, 152

  Vanden Bergh, Richard, 170

  Van Reenen, John, 48, 50

  vendor-managed inventory (VMI) system, 34

  Verizon, 6

  Vestager, Margrethe, 134–135, 148

  Wachter, Till von, 284

  wages, labor market concentration’s impact on, 281. See also Balassa-Samuelson effect

  Walmart, 31–35, 216, 233

  washing machines, 92–93

  Waugh, Michael E., 22

  wealth management industry, 215

  Weinstein, David, 50, 59

  Welch, W. P., 190

  welfare, 27–30

  WhatsApp, 274

  Wheeler, Tom, 200

  Whirlpool, 92

  White, Lawrence, 87

  Wier, L., 135

  Wilson, Charles, 240, 252

  Wilson, Woodrow, 129

  Wollmann, Thomas, 201

  workers’ flows, 200–201

  World War I, 128–129

  World War II, 129

  young firms, 82–83

  Zingales, Luigi, 6, 202

  Zuckerberg, Mark, 244

  Zucman, Gabriel, 135, 263

  Zweig, Stefan, x

 

 

 


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