Superstar firms are running away with the global economy

By Matej Bajgar, Sara Calligaris, Chiara Criscuolo, Luca Marcolin & Jonathan Timmis

Imagine a dynamic economy. Businesses compete for customers under the constant threat of new competitors entering the market. If firms want to survive, they need to constantly innovate and upgrade the quality of their products while keeping their prices low. Resources keep flowing to the firms that use them best. We seem to be drifting away from this ideal.

In two new studies, we find signs of a weakening competitive environment for a large number of countries using two distinct measures: firm markups and industry concentration. These studies suggest that the trends first observed in the US are part of a broader phenomenon, likely caused by factors that are common to many developed economies.

One candidate is merger and acquisition activity, which has reached record highs in recent years. Our preliminary results indicate that some M&As, especially large ones, are correlated with increases in industry concentration measures.

Another candidate is the rise of “superstar” firms—a minority of firms that are more innovative, productive and profitable than the others. This view is supported by the data: In line with other papers, we find that large firms in the concentrating industries display a faster, not slower, productivity growth compared with large firms in industries where concentration is stable or decreasing.

Superstar firms are often big investors in intangible assets—such as advertising, training, management R&D and data. Indeed, we find that firms operating in industries with more intangible assets tend to have higher markups, once the role of other firm and industry features in shaping markups is taken into account.

Finally, digital technologies may be the elephant in room, though their influence remains hard to pin down. They determine the become the superstars. But they also present challenges to researchers trying to measure them.

The jury is still out on the relative importance of M&As, intangibles and digitization, together with other factors, such as anticompetitive regulations. For firms, however, the message is clear: This is a superstars’ economy, and the scope for being average is becoming increasingly narrow.

Matej Bajgar, Sara Calligaris, Chiara Criscuolo and Luca Marcolin are economists at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Jonathan Timmis is an economist at the International Finance Corp.—World Bank Group.

Image credits: hbr.org



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