2015
DOI: 10.1257/mac.20120155
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Understanding Markups in the Open Economy

Abstract: This paper presents a new model of Bertrand competition between heterogeneous firms in the open economy where the macroeconomic distribution of markups responds to the degree of trade openness and the underlying level of technology in each trading partner. The model’s simple closed-form distributions for markups and pricing yield predictions that coincide with a number of stylized facts from the empirical literature on markups, pass-through, and trade openness which previously could be illustrated only through… Show more

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Cited by 56 publications
(25 citation statements)
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References 55 publications
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“…De Blas and Russ () build a model on the pro‐competitive effects of trade, highlighting that firms can no longer pass along their own production cost shocks under multilateral trade agreements. Thus, by reducing their market power and inhibiting a markup effect, multilateral trade agreements might reduce the volatility of prices.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…De Blas and Russ () build a model on the pro‐competitive effects of trade, highlighting that firms can no longer pass along their own production cost shocks under multilateral trade agreements. Thus, by reducing their market power and inhibiting a markup effect, multilateral trade agreements might reduce the volatility of prices.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the firm level, economic theory may also explain our results. De Blas and Russ () study analytically the pro‐competitive effects of trade in a model with heterogeneous firms and endogenous markups under Bertrand competition. They provide distributions of markups sensitive to the market structure, showing that multilateral treaties reduce the volatility of import and export prices.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Standard monopolistic competition models used in the trade literature based on demand systems such as Almost Ideal Demand or Translog (Feenstra and Weinstein (2017)), Linear demand (Melitz and Ottaviano (2008)), Logit demand (Fajgelbaum et al (2011)), and CARA demand (Behrens and Murata (2007)) do not feature anti-competitive effects from opening to trade. Additionally, trade models based on CES demand with oligopolistic competition (Atkeson and Burstein (2008), Holmes et al (2014), De Blas and Russ (2015), Edmond et al (2015)) also have the feature that larger market share implies larger market power, and thus successful import penetration must have pro-competitive effects in these models.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gains in allocative efficiency are equivalent to pro-competitive gains since they are due to changing markups. Prominent papers in this large literature include Arkolakis, Costinot, Donaldson, and Rodríguez-Clare (2015), de Blas and Russ (2015), Dhingra and Morrow (2014), Edmond, Midrigan, and Xu (2015), Epifani andGancia (2011), Feenstra (2014), Feenstra and Weinstein (Forthcoming), Holmes, Hsu, and Lee (2014).…”
Section: Pro-competitive Gains In International Tradementioning
confidence: 99%