Keywords
concentration, institutions, regulation
Abstract
In a new dataset of 1.3 million firms in 155 countries, I establish a number of regularities in cross-country differences in economic concentration. Concentration of sales and employment is substantially higher in smaller countries and in less-developed countries; these two factors alone explain roughly half the cross-country variation in concentration. Nevertheless, a number of institutional factors offer additional explanatory power for concentration. Concentration is higher in countries with higher entry costs for new firms, in countries with weaker antitrust policy, in countries with less control of corruption, in countries with weaker rule of law, and in countries with more burdensome regulation. These relationships are especially pronounced in nontradable and investment-intensive industries, suggesting that natural barriers to competition facilitate the monopolization of sectors especially when institutions are weak.
Original Publication Citation
Institutions and concentration, 2008, Journal of Development Economics 86, 367–394.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Mitton, Todd, "Institutions and Concentration" (2006). Faculty Publications. 9275.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/9275
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
2006
Publisher
Journal of Development Economics
Language
English
College
Marriott School of Business
Department
Finance
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