Micro and Macro Perspectives on Production-Based Markups
John Fernald,
Amit Gandhi,
Dimitrije Ruzic and
James Traina
No 20628, CEPR Discussion Papers from Centre for Economic Policy Research
Abstract:
We review the "production approach" to estimating markups — the ratio of price to marginal cost. Paired with increasingly rich microdata and advances in production-function estimation, the method enables scalable analysis of markups across firms, industries, and time. We survey what economists need to know about the production approach, emphasizing both its promise and its fragility. Conceptually, empirically, and econometrically, the production-based markup is a residual — absorbing model misspecification, data limitations, and unobserved frictions. These challenges help explain why empirical results often diverge, including on whether markups have risen sharply in recent decades. We outline practical guidance for researchers and highlight directions for future work: improving transparency in reporting, validating production-based markups against demand-based and quasi-experimental estimates, and integrating firm-level heterogeneity into macroeconomic models. The production approach is not a finished product, but it remains a uniquely powerful tool for studying market power and its implications for productivity, welfare, and macroeconomic dynamics.
Keywords: Production-based markups; market power; Production function estimation; Firm heterogeneity; Micro-to-macro linkages (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D43 E22 E23 L11 L16 O33 O47 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025-09
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