Concentration Ratio - economics PDF

Title Concentration Ratio - economics
Course Eco
Institution North South University
Pages 2
File Size 83.2 KB
File Type PDF
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economics...


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Concentration Ratio What is the 'Concentration Ratio' The concentration ratio, in economics, is a ratio that indicates the size of firms in relation to their industry as a whole. Low concentration ratio in an industry would indicate greater competition among the firms in that industry, compared to one with a ratio nearing 100%, which would be evident in an industry characterized by a true monopoly. BREAKING DOWN 'Concentration Ratio' The concentration ratio indicates whether an industry is comprised of a few large firms or many small firms. The four-firm concentration ratio, which consists of the market share of the four largest firms in an industry, expressed as a percentage, is a commonly used concentration ratio. Contrary to the four-firm concentration ratio, the eight-firm concentration ratio is calculated for the market share of the eight largest firms in an industry. Concentration Ratio Formula and Interpretation The concentration ratio is calculated as the sum of the market share percentage held by the largest specified number of firms in an industry. The concentration ratio ranges from 0% to 100%, and an industry's concentration ratio indicates the degree of competition in the industry. A concentration ratio that ranges from 0% to 50% may indicate that the industry is perfectly competitive and is considered low concentration. Medium concentration occurs when an industry's ratio ranges from 50% to 80%. This indicates that the industry is an oligopoly. High concentration occurs when the concentration ratio ranges from 80% to 100%, a level that indicates the industry is an oligopoly. If the concentration ratio of one company is equal to 100%, this indicates that the industry is a monopoly. Example Calculation Assume that ABC Inc., XYZ Corp., GHI Inc. and JKL Corp. are the four largest companies in the biotechnology industry, and an economist aims to calculate the degree of competition. For the most recent fiscal year, ABC Inc., XYZ Corp., GHI Inc. and JKL Corp. have market shares of 10%, 15%, 26% and 33%, respectively. Consequently, the biotech industry's four-firm concentration ratio is 84%. Therefore, the ratio indicates that the biotech industry is an oligopoly. The same could be calculated for more or less than four of the top companies in the industry. The concentration ratio only indicates the competitiveness of an industry and whether an industry follows an oligopolistic market structure. The Herfindahl index, another indicator of firm size, has a fair amount of correlation to the concentration ratio and may be a better measure of market concentration.

Two common ratios  

The Four-Firm Concentration Ratio measures the total market share of the four largest firms in an industry. The Eight-Firm Concentration Ratio measures the total market share of the eight largest firms in an industry.

Usually, these two common ratios are comparable from industry to industry, while concentration ratios for other numbers of firms can be also calculated.[1]

Concentration levels Concentration ratios range from 0 to 100 percent. The levels reach from no, low or medium to high to "total" concentration. No concentration 0% means perfect competition or at the very least monopolistic competition. If for example CR4=0 %, the four largest firm in the industry would not have any significant market share. Low concentration 0% to 40%.[5] This category ranges from perfect competition to an oligopoly. Medium concentration 40% to 70%.[5] An industry in this range is likely an oligopoly. High concentration 70% to 100%.[5] This category ranges from an oligopoly to monopoly. Total concentration 100% means an extremely concentrated oligopoly. If for example CR1= 100%, there is a monopoly...


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