Competition, Technological Change and Productivity Gains: A Sectoral Analysis

Abstract The empirical relationship between competition intensity and the rate of productivity growth across 30 sectors of the French economy between 1978 and 2015 displays an inverted U-shape. This implies that there exists an optimal level of competition for each sector, defined by the price marku...

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Main Authors: Stéphane Ciriani, François Jeanjean
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2020-06-01
Series:Intereconomics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10272-020-0899-8
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spelling doaj-5bff2d35ef614306b659ae8e5c609bd72021-06-13T11:26:10ZengSpringerIntereconomics0020-53461613-964X2020-06-0155319219810.1007/s10272-020-0899-8Competition, Technological Change and Productivity Gains: A Sectoral AnalysisStéphane Ciriani0François Jeanjean1Regulatory Affairs SDG/STRAT, OrangeOrangeAbstract The empirical relationship between competition intensity and the rate of productivity growth across 30 sectors of the French economy between 1978 and 2015 displays an inverted U-shape. This implies that there exists an optimal level of competition for each sector, defined by the price markup that maximises the growth rate of hourly labour productivity. As there is a significant and strong positive correlation between optimal markups and technical progress rates in each sector, it follows that sectors with high technical progress require higher markups to maximise their labour productivity growth rate. The persistence of non-optimal markups in French sectors is associated with a 0.4% loss in aggregate annual labour productivity growth during the period (1.86%). French long-term productivity growth could have reached 2.25% had markups been at their optimal level. As a result, policies to foster innovation and productivity should aim at enabling the optimal level of markup (or market power), particularly in high-innovation sectors.https://doi.org/10.1007/s10272-020-0899-8
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stéphane Ciriani
François Jeanjean
spellingShingle Stéphane Ciriani
François Jeanjean
Competition, Technological Change and Productivity Gains: A Sectoral Analysis
Intereconomics
author_facet Stéphane Ciriani
François Jeanjean
author_sort Stéphane Ciriani
title Competition, Technological Change and Productivity Gains: A Sectoral Analysis
title_short Competition, Technological Change and Productivity Gains: A Sectoral Analysis
title_full Competition, Technological Change and Productivity Gains: A Sectoral Analysis
title_fullStr Competition, Technological Change and Productivity Gains: A Sectoral Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Competition, Technological Change and Productivity Gains: A Sectoral Analysis
title_sort competition, technological change and productivity gains: a sectoral analysis
publisher Springer
series Intereconomics
issn 0020-5346
1613-964X
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Abstract The empirical relationship between competition intensity and the rate of productivity growth across 30 sectors of the French economy between 1978 and 2015 displays an inverted U-shape. This implies that there exists an optimal level of competition for each sector, defined by the price markup that maximises the growth rate of hourly labour productivity. As there is a significant and strong positive correlation between optimal markups and technical progress rates in each sector, it follows that sectors with high technical progress require higher markups to maximise their labour productivity growth rate. The persistence of non-optimal markups in French sectors is associated with a 0.4% loss in aggregate annual labour productivity growth during the period (1.86%). French long-term productivity growth could have reached 2.25% had markups been at their optimal level. As a result, policies to foster innovation and productivity should aim at enabling the optimal level of markup (or market power), particularly in high-innovation sectors.
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s10272-020-0899-8
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AT francoisjeanjean competitiontechnologicalchangeandproductivitygainsasectoralanalysis
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