Biases in Static Oligopoly Models?:
Evidence from the California Electricity Market
Dae-Wook Kim, Department of Economics, University of California, Davis
Christopher R. Knittel, Department of Economics, University of California, Davis
Estimating market power is often complicated by the lack of
reliable measures of marginal cost. Instead, policy-makers often rely on other
summary statistics of the market, thought to be correlated with price cost
margins--such as concentration ratios or the HHI. In many industries, these
summary statistics may be only weakly correlated with deviations from perfectly
competitive pricing. Beginning with Gollop and Roberts (1979), a number of
empirical studies have allowed the data to identify industry competition and
marginal cost levels by estimating the firms' first order condition within
a conjectural variations framework. Despite the prevalence of such "New
Empirical Industrial Organization" (NEIO) studies, Corts (1999) illustrates
the estimated mark-up levels may be biased, since the estimated conjectural
variations model forces the supply relationship to be a ray through the marginal
cost intercept, whereas this need not be true in dynamic games. In this paper,
we use direct measures of marginal cost for the California electricity market
to measure the extent to which estimated mark-ups and marginal costs are biased.
Our results suggest that the NEIO technique poorly estimates the level of
mark-ups and the sensitivity of marginal cost to cost shifters.
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