Causation

Effects of Declining Competition: Rising Markups, Profit Shares, and Inequality

A long-term decrease in competition within goods and services markets is a primary driver for the observed rise in both average firm markups and the share of national income going to profits, a trend evident in the US since the 1980s. Within the wage-setting/price-setting (WS-PS) model, this decline in competition is represented by a downward shift of the price-setting curve. This shift leads to a new equilibrium that directly contributes to a rise in household income inequality by altering the distribution of income in favor of firm owners over workers.

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Updated 2026-01-15

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