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Autori principali: Fernald, John, Gandhi, Amit, Ruzic, Dimitrije, Traina, James
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.13224
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author Fernald, John
Gandhi, Amit
Ruzic, Dimitrije
Traina, James
author_facet Fernald, John
Gandhi, Amit
Ruzic, Dimitrije
Traina, James
contents We review the "production approach" to estimating markups, the ratio of price to marginal cost. The approach is uniquely scalable: it requires no model of consumer demand or market structure and applies broadly across firms, industries, and time. Our organizing insight is that the production-based markup is a residual. Like the Solow residual, it is clean in theory but potentially contaminated by misspecification and mismeasurement. This framing helps explain why small differences in implementation can produce starkly different results from the same data. In some cases, markups have risen sharply. In others, they have not. Despite the disagreements in the literature, the importance of understanding and measuring market power cannot be overstated. We provide conceptual rationales for this disagreement, offer practical guidance on data and estimation, and call for greater transparency about how much of the variation attributed to markups may instead reflect technology.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_13224
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Micro and Macro Perspectives on Production-Based Markups
Fernald, John
Gandhi, Amit
Ruzic, Dimitrije
Traina, James
General Economics
Economics
We review the "production approach" to estimating markups, the ratio of price to marginal cost. The approach is uniquely scalable: it requires no model of consumer demand or market structure and applies broadly across firms, industries, and time. Our organizing insight is that the production-based markup is a residual. Like the Solow residual, it is clean in theory but potentially contaminated by misspecification and mismeasurement. This framing helps explain why small differences in implementation can produce starkly different results from the same data. In some cases, markups have risen sharply. In others, they have not. Despite the disagreements in the literature, the importance of understanding and measuring market power cannot be overstated. We provide conceptual rationales for this disagreement, offer practical guidance on data and estimation, and call for greater transparency about how much of the variation attributed to markups may instead reflect technology.
title Micro and Macro Perspectives on Production-Based Markups
topic General Economics
Economics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.13224