穷人为市场集中度的提高付出更多吗?零售石油市场研究

Franco Mariuzzo, Peter L. Ormosi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

产业组织的核心原则之一是,增加/减少市场集中度可能导致增加/减少加价。但这对每个消费者的影响程度相同吗?以前的文献一致认为,即使在同质商品的情况下,也可能存在显著的价格分散,这至少部分是由于消费者参与市场的程度存在异质性。我们将这种异质性与市场集中度变化对加价的影响联系起来。为此,我们结合了西澳大利亚州18年来的加油站一级汽车燃料价格数据和当地市场集中度的丰富信息。我们采用非参数因果森林方法来探讨市场退出/进入效应的异质性。本文提供了市场集中度变化的分配效应的证据。由于市场退出,收入较低的地区加油站的价格利润率增幅较大。另一方面,与高收入地区相比,相同的低收入地区并没有获得更大的利润降幅。我们认为,这些发现是由于不同人口统计群体的消费者参与市场的程度不同。我们的研究结果支持了这样一种观点,即反垄断可以帮助解决不平等问题,同时忠实于促进竞争的使命,前提是不仅要优先解决供给侧问题,还要探索需求侧的补救措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Do the Poor Pay More for Increasing Market Concentration? A Study of Retail Petroleum Markets
One of the central tenets of industrial organisation is that increasing/decreasing market concentration is likely to lead to increased/reduced markups. But does this affect every consumer to the same extent? Previous literature agrees that there can be significant price dispersion even in the case of homogeneous goods, which is at least partially due to the heterogeneity in how much consumers engage with the market. We link this heterogeneity to the impact of changing market concentration on markups. For this purpose, we employ a combination of 18 years of station-level motor fuel price data from Western Australia and a rich set of information on local market concentration. We summon a non-parametric causal forest approach to explore the heterogeneity in the effect of market exit/entry. The paper offers evidence of the distributional effect of changing market concentration. Areas with lower income experience a larger increase in petrol stations' price margin as a result of market exit. On the other hand, entry does not benefit the same low-income areas with a larger reduction in the margin than in high-income areas. We argue that these findings are due to differences in how much consumers in different demographic groups engage with the market. Our findings give support to the argument that antitrust could help address inequality while staying true to its mission of promoting competition, provided that priorities are given to not only fixing supply-side problems but also to exploring demand-side remedies.
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