The potential $85.4
billion AT&T - Time Warner merger will create a media/communications
colossus that, if history repeats itself, will provide no benefit to American
consumers. A brief issued by the Council of Economic
Advisors in April 2016 looks at the benefits of competition to the U.S. economy
and, in particular, to consumers and workers and how this key component of a
"free marketplace" is in decline.
It's pretty much a given
that increased competition in a marketplace results in significant economic
benefits as firms are forced to do three things:
1.) keep price increases
at palatable levels
2.) deliver higher
quality products
3.) deliver innovative
products
By doing these three
things, firms generate economic growth and a higher living standard because the
marketplace forces firms to compete for workers, raising the price of labor.
Where there is little
competition (or a monopoly), firms can use their market power to raise prices
and lower quality or, even worse, block entry to the marketplace by potential
competitors. In addition, where monopolies exist, firms are less likely
to pursue cost reductions. If we want to see some relatively modern
examples, we can look at he former Soviet Union and its satellite states where a few state-owned companies dominated
the marketplace, bringing us such quality products as the Lada, Yugo and Skoda brands of vehicles. Microsoft is a recent American example of what happens when
a technology company uses its power to control the PC operating system
marketplace; by flexing its corporate muscle, it prevented the development and adoption of
non-Microsoft browsers and the wide adoption of alternate operating systems by hardware manufacturers.
Sadly, history has shown
that the presence of a significant number of competitors in a given marketplace sometimes does little to ensure competition. In the case of the world's largest
manufacturers of liquid crystal displays (LCDs), the ubiquitous product found
in computer monitors, televisions and laptop computers, companies conspired to price fix
inputs that directly affected the prices of LCDs. According to the
Department of Justice, during the four years that the conspiring corporations
met to coordinate product pricing, the average margin per panel was $53 higher
than it would have been otherwise. While this may seem insignificant, it
added up to more than $2 billion that was transferred from the wallets of
American consumers to the "pockets" of the corporations involved.
With that background on
the importance of competition, let's look at the current state of competition
in the United States. Let's start by looking at a table which shows the
change in market concentration by economic sector between 1997 and 2012 for key
industries and its impact on revenue:
The majority of key
industries have seen the share of revenue earned by the 50 largest firms in the
industry rise between 1997 and 2012, in some cases, by a significant amount.
For example, the national loan market share of the top ten banks rose
from 30 percent in 1980 to 50 percent in 2010 and the deposit market share of
the top ten banks rose from 20 percent to almost 50 percent over the same
period. Using the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) which is defined as:
"A measure of
market concentration that is created by summing up the squared shares of firms
in a market. Higher values of the HHI indicate higher market concentration; it can be close to zero when a market is comprised of a
large number of firms of small size and reaches a maximum of 10,000 when a
market is controlled by a single firm."
...we can see how two industries have seen very significant concentration. Between the
early 1990s and 2006, the HHI for hospital markets increased by 50 percent
to 3200 (the equivalent of just three equal-sized competitors in a market)
and the HHI for wireless providers in a market rose from under 2500
in 2004 to over 3000 ten years later. This shows us how dangerous
concentration can become to consumers.
Here is a graph
that shows one reason why there is decreasing competition in the U.S.
marketplace, a drop in firm entry rates to the point where firm entry rates now
equal firm exit rates:
Obviously,
the dynamics of the American business marketplace have become rather subdued as the
years have passed. The reasons for declining firm entry rates are not
clear however, they could be related to an increase
of government legislation, marketplace advantages that exist for
incumbent firms but not for new companies (i.e. economies of scale that
allow larger firms to produce for less) and government lobbying by existing companies that
protects them from competition.
There is one key additional
factor that may be contributing to reduced competition; mergers and
acquisitions. As I noted in the opening of this posting, the
upcoming AT&T - Time Warner merger will create a media/communications giant
that will, no doubt, impact consumers and employees. In 2015 alone,
global mergers surpassed $5 trillion in value with $2.5 trillion of that in the
United States, the largest transaction year on record. Globally, deals
larger than $10 billion in size account for 37 percent of global takeover
values, up from an average of 21 percent for the last five years.
Here is a graphic which shows the proportion of mergers with a value of
greater than $1 billion between 2000 and 2014 (blue line):
The
proportion of billion dollar plus mergers has more than doubled over the
past decade and a half. As well, the red line shows the percentage of
these mergers that were subjected to investigations by antitrust authorities;
this too has risen from around 25 percent in 2000 to nearly 50 percent in 2014.
The
increase in corporate concentration has had one good impact; as shown on this
graphic, the return on invested capital for the largest
publicly-traded, non financial American firms (i.e. the 90th percentile)
is now more than five times the median compared to just two times the median in
the 1990s:
Obviously,
one has to wonder what impact this increase in concentration has had on the
American economy since the end of the Great Recession. Even though
corporate profits hit record levels, there is no doubt that economic growth is
stagnant, wages are stagnant and productivity is stagnant.
The authors of the report close with these statements which
illuminates the problem facing the U.S. economy:
"Recent indicators suggest
that many industries may be becoming more concentrated, that new firm entry is
declining, and that some firms are generating returns that are greatly in
excess of historical standards. In addition, the dollar volume of merger and
acquisition activity is at record levels....Free markets have the potential to
provide great improvements in living standards, channeling resources to
productive uses and providing consumers with quality and choices. Sometimes,
though, abuses of market power by firms can undermine many of these potential
benefits. As this issue brief demonstrates, competition between firms can
generate many benefits to consumers, workers, and small businesses. Yet, as
this brief also discusses, some indicators suggest there is more market
concentration, higher profits for a few firms, and declining entry, all of
which could result from less competition." (my bold)
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