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Herfindahl–Hirschman index

The Herfindahl index (also known as Herfindahl–Hirschman Index, HHI, or sometimes HHI-score) is a measure of the size of firms in relation to the industry they are in and is an indicator of the amount of competition among them. Named after economists Orris C. Herfindahl and Albert O. Hirschman, it is an economic concept widely applied in competition law, antitrust regulation,[1] and technology management.[2] HHI has continued to be used by antitrust authorities, primarily to evaluate and understand how mergers will affect their associated markets.[3] HHI is calculated by squaring the market share of each competing firm in the industry and then summing the resulting numbers[4] (sometimes limited to the 50 largest firms[5][6]). The result is proportional to the average market share, weighted by market share. As such, it can range from 0 to 1.0, moving from a huge number of very small firms to a single monopolistic producer. Increases in the HHI generally indicate a decrease in competition and an increase of market power, whereas decreases indicate the opposite. Alternatively, the index can be expressed per 10,000 "points". For example, an index of .25 is the same as 2,500 points.

The major benefit of the Herfindahl index in relation to measures such as the concentration ratio is that the HHI gives more weight to larger firms. Other advantages of the HHI include its simple calculation method and the small amount of often easily obtainable data required for the calculation.[7]

The HHI has the same formula as the Simpson diversity index, which is a diversity index used in ecology; the inverse participation ratio (IPR) in physics; and the inverse of the effective number of parties index in political science.

Example edit

Consider an example of 3 firms before and after a merger, with the top 2 firms producing 40% of goods each, and the other firm producing 20%.

Prior to Merger:  [8]

Now let's consider the top 2 firms merging.

Post Merger:  [8]

As can be seen prior to the merger, the HHI, while not low, is in a range that allows for strong competition. However, post merger the HHI reaches 68%, approaching a HHI consistent with monopolies. This high HHI would lead to weak competition.[8]

This demonstrates how the HHI enables antitrust authorities to understand the impact that mergers have on the market.[3]

The index involves taking the market share of the respective market competitors, squaring it, and adding them together (e.g. in the market for X, company A has 30%, B, C, D, E and F have 10% each and G through to Z have 1% each). When calculating HHI the post merger level of the HHI score and the total increase of the HHI score are considered when reviewing the outcome. If the resulting figure is above a certain threshold then economists will consider the market to have a high concentration (e.g. market X's concentration is 0.142 or 14.2%). This threshold is considered to be 0.25 in the U.S.,[9] while the EU prefers to focus on the level of change, for instance that concern is raised if there is a 0.025 change when the index already shows a concentration of 0.1.[10] So to take the example, if in market X company B (with 10% market share) suddenly bought out the shares of company C (with 10% also) then this new market concentration would make the index jump to 0.162. Here it can be seen that it would not be relevant for merger law in the U.S. (being under 0.18) or in the EU (because there is not a change over 0.025).

Formula edit

 
where   is the market share of firm   in the market, and   is the number of firms.[8] Therefore, in a market with 5 firms each producing 20%, the HHI would be  .

The Herfindahl Index (HHI) ranges from 1/N (in case of perfect competition) to 1 (in case of monopoly), where N is the number of firms in the market. Equivalently, if percents are used as whole numbers, as in 75 instead of 0.75, the index can range up to 1002, or 10,000.

 
Herfindahl-Hirschman Index

An HHI below 0.01 (or 100) indicates a highly competitive industry, Mergers and acquisitions with an increase of 100 points or less will usually not have any anti competitive effects and will require no further analysis.[10]
An HHI below 0.15 (or 1,500) indicates an unconcentrated industry. Mergers and acquisitions between 100 and 1500 points are unlikely to have anti-competitive effects and will most likely not need further analysis.[10]
An HHI between 0.15 and 0.25 (or 1,500 to 2,500) indicates moderate concentration. Mergers and acquisitions that result in moderate market concentration from HHI increases will raise anti-competitive concerns and will require further analysis.[10]
An HHI above 0.25 (above 2,500) indicates high concentration.[10] Mergers and acquisitions with HHI scores of 2,500 or above will be considered anti competitive and an in-depth analysis produced, if the scores are well above 2,500 they are considered to enhance market power they may only be allowed to progress when significant evidence is shown that the merger or acquisition will not increase market power.[10]

A small index indicates a competitive industry with no dominant players. If all firms have an equal share the reciprocal of the index shows the number of firms in the industry. When firms have unequal shares, the reciprocal of the index indicates the "equivalent" number of firms in the industry. Using case 2, we find that the market structure is equivalent to having 1.55521 firms of the same size.

There is also a normalized Herfindahl index. Whereas the Herfindahl index ranges from 1/N to one, the normalized Herfindahl index ranges from 0 to 1. It is computed as:

  •   for N > 1 and
  •   for N = 1

where again, N is the number of firms in the market, and HHI is the usual Herfindahl Index, as above.

Using the normalized Herfindahl index, information about the total number of players (N) is lost, as shown in the following example:

Assume a market with two players and equally distributed market share;   and  . Now compare that to a situation with three players and again an equally distributed market share;  , note that   like the situation with two players. The market with three players is less concentrated, but this is not obvious looking at just H*. Thus, the normalized Herfindahl index can serve as a measure for the equality of distributions, but is less suitable for concentration.

Problems edit

The usefulness of this statistic to detect monopoly formation is directly dependent on a proper definition of a particular market (which hinges primarily on the notion of substitutability). The index fails to take into consideration the complex nature of the market being tested.[11]

  • For example, if the statistic were to look at a hypothetical financial services industry as a whole, and found that it contained 6 main firms with 15% market share apiece, then the industry would look non-monopolistic. However, suppose one of those firms handles 90% of the checking and savings accounts and physical branches (and overcharges for them because of its monopoly), and the others primarily do commercial banking and investments. In this scenario, the index hints at dominance by one firm. The market is not properly defined because checking accounts are not substitutable with commercial and investment banking. The problems of defining a market work the other way as well. To take another example, one cinema may have 90% of the movie market, but if movie theaters compete against video stores, pubs and nightclubs then people are less likely to be suffering due to market dominance.
  • Another typical problem in defining the market is choosing a geographic scope. For example, firms may have 20% market share each, but may occupy five areas of the country in which they are monopoly providers and thus do not compete against each other. A service provider or manufacturer in one city is not necessarily substitutable with a service provider or manufacturer in another city, depending on the importance of being local for the business—for example, telemarketing services are rather global in scope, while shoe repair services are local.

The United States federal anti-trust authorities such as the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission use the Herfindahl index as a screening tool to determine whether a proposed merger or acquisition is likely to raise antitrust concerns. Increases of over 0.01 (100) generally provoke scrutiny, although this varies from case to case. The Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice considers Herfindahl indices between 0.15 (1,500) and 0.25 (2,500) to be "moderately concentrated" and indices above 0.25 to be "highly concentrated".[4] However, these indices scores are not rigid guidelines that must be followed, while high levels of concentration is concerning, they indices scores provide ways to identify which mergers and acquisitions are potentially noncompetitive. There are other factors that need to be considered that will either help reinforce or counter the harmful effects of higher market concentration. The Herfindahl-Hirschman index is used as a starting point to gauge initial market power and then determine if additional information is needed to conduct further analysis on any potential anti-competitive concerns.[10]

Intuition edit

When all the firms in an industry have equal market shares,  . The Herfindahl is correlated with the number of firms in an industry because its lower bound when there are N firms is 1/N. In the more general case of unequal market share, 1/H is called "equivalent (or effective) number of firms in the industry", Neqi or Neff.[12][13][14] An industry with 3 firms cannot have a lower Herfindahl than an industry with 20 firms when firms have equal market shares. But as market shares of the 20-firm industry diverge from equality the Herfindahl can exceed that of the equal-market-share 3-firm industry (e.g., if one firm has 81% of the market and the remaining 19 have 1% each, then  ). A higher Herfindahl signifies a less competitive (i.e., more concentrated) industry.

Appearance in market structure edit

It can be shown that the Herfindahl index arises as a natural consequence of assuming that a given market's structure is described by Cournot competition.[15] Suppose that we have a Cournot model for competition between   firms with different linear marginal costs and a homogeneous product. Then the profit of the  -th firm   is:

 
where   is the quantity produced by each firm,   is the marginal cost of production for each firm, and   is the price of the product. Taking the derivative of the firm's profit function with respect to its output to maximize its profit gives us:
 
Dividing by   gives us each firm's profit margin:
 
where   is the market share and   is the price elasticity of demand. Multiplying each firm's profit margin by its market share gives us:
 
where   is the Herfindahl index. Therefore, the Herfindahl index is directly related to the weighted average of the profit margins of firms under Cournot competition with linear marginal costs.

Effective assets in a portfolio edit

The Herfindahl index is also a widely used metric for portfolio concentration.[16] In portfolio theory, the Herfindahl index is related to the effective number of positions  [17] held in a portfolio, where   is computed as the sum of the squares of the proportion of market value invested in each security. A low H-index implies a very diversified portfolio: as an example, a portfolio with   is equivalent to a portfolio with   equally weighted positions. The H-index has been shown to be one of the most efficient measures of portfolio diversification.[18]

It may also be used as a constraint to force a portfolio to hold a minimum number of effective assets:

 
For commonly used portfolio optimization techniques, such as mean-variance and CVaR, the optimal solution may be found using second-order cone programming.

Decomposition edit

Supposing that   firms share all the market, each one with a participation of   and market share  , then the index can be expressed as  , where   is the statistical variance of the firm shares, defined as   where   is the mean of participations. If all firms have equal (identical) shares (that is, if the market structure is completely symmetric, in which case  ) then   is zero and   equals  . If the number of firms in the market is held constant, then a higher variance due to a higher level of asymmetry between firms' shares (that is, a higher share dispersion) will result in a higher index value. See the Brown and Warren-Boulton (1988) and Warren-Boulton (1990) texts cited below.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ United States Department of Justice 2010, § 5.3
  2. ^ Liston-Heyes, Catherine; Pilkington, Alan (February 2004). "Inventive concentration in the production of green technology: A comparative analysis of fuel cell patents". Science and Public Policy. 34 (1). Beech Tree Publishing: 15–25. doi:10.3152/147154304781780190.
  3. ^ a b Roberts, Toby (April 2014). "When Bigger Is Better: A Critique of the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index's Use to Evaluate Mergers in Network Industries" (PDF). Pace Law Review. 34 (2): 894–946. ISSN 0272-2410.
  4. ^ a b "Herfindahl-Hirschman Index". justice.gov. United States Department of Justice. July 31, 2018. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  5. ^ Parkin, Michael (2002). "Chapter 9: Organizing Production" (PDF). Economics (6th ed.). Boston, MA: Addison-Wesley/Pearson Education. pp. 155–166. ISBN 9780321112057. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  6. ^ Parkin, Michael; Bade, Robin (2006). "Chapter 9: Organizing Production – Solutions to Problems" (PDF). Economics: Canada in the Global Environment – Solutions to Problems (6th ed.). Pearson Education Canada. pp. 30–32. ISBN 978-0321312686 – via St. Francis Xavier University.
  7. ^ Maverick, J. B. (September 21, 2021). "What Are the Benefits and Shortfalls of the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index?". Investopedia. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  8. ^ a b c d Rhoades, Stephen A. (March 1993). "The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index" (PDF). Federal Reserve Bulletin. 79 (March). Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis: 188–189.
  9. ^ United States Department of Justice 2010, § 5.3
  10. ^ a b c d e f g "Horizontal Merger Guidelines (08/19/2010)". justice.gov. United States Department of Justice. August 19, 2010. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  11. ^ Bromberg, Michael (November 21, 2022). "Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) Definition, Formula, and Example". Investopedia. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  12. ^ Kelly, Jr., William A. (July 1981). "A Generalized Interpretation of the Herfindahl Index". Southern Economic Journal. 48 (1). Southern Economic Association: 50–57. doi:10.2307/1058595. JSTOR 1058595.
  13. ^ Adelman, M. A. (February 1969). "Comment on the "H" Concentration Measure as a Numbers-Equivalent". The Review of Economics and Statistics. 51 (1). The MIT Press: 99–101. doi:10.2307/1926955. JSTOR 1926955.
  14. ^ Bishop, Robert L. (December 1952). "Elasticities, Cross-Elasticities, and Market Relationships". The American Economic Review. 42 (5). American Economic Association: 780–803. JSTOR 1812527.
  15. ^ Viscusi, W. Kip; Harrington, Jr., Joseph Emmett; Sappington, David Edward Michael (2018). Economics of Regulation and Antitrust (Fifth ed.). Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press. pp. 177–178. ISBN 9780262038065. LCCN 2017056198.
  16. ^ Lovett, William Anthony (1988). Banking and Financial Institutions Law in a Nutshell (2nd ed.). West Publishing Company. ISBN 9780314414434.
  17. ^ Bouchaud, Jean-Philippe; Potters, Marc; Aguilar, Jean-Pierre (July 1997). "Missing Information and Asset Allocation". arXiv:cond-mat/9707042.Bibcode:1997cond.mat..7042B
  18. ^ Woerheide, Walt J.; Persson, Don (1993). (PDF). Financial Services Review. 2 (2): 73–85. doi:10.1016/1057-0810(92)90003-U. ISSN 1057-0810. S2CID 18548005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-03-23.

Further reading edit

  • Brown, Donald M.; Warren-Boulton, Frederick R. (May 11, 1988). Testing the Structure-Competition Relationship on Cross-Sectional Firm Data (Report). Discussion paper 88-6. Washington, D.C.: Economic Analysis Group, U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division. OCLC 221796344.
  • Capozza, Dennis R.; Lee, Sohan (1996). "Portfolio Characteristics and Net Asset Values in REITs". The Canadian Journal of Economics. 29 (Special Issue: Part 2): S520–S526. doi:10.2307/136100. JSTOR 136100.
  • Hirschman, Albert O. (1964). "The Paternity of an Index". The American Economic Review. 54 (5). American Economic Association: 761–762. JSTOR 1818582.
  • Kwoka, John E. Jr. (1977). "Large Firm Dominance and Price-Cost Margins in Manufacturing Industries". Southern Economic Journal. 44 (1): 183–189. doi:10.2307/1057315. JSTOR 1057315.
  • Matsumoto, Akio; Merlone, Ugo; Szidarovszky, Ferenc (2012). "Some notes on applying the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index". Applied Economics Letters. 19 (2): 181–184. doi:10.1080/13504851.2011.570705. S2CID 153436570.
  • Warren-Boulton, Frederick R. (1990). "Implications of U.S. Experience with Horizontal Mergers and Takeovers for Canadian Competition Policy". In Mathewson, Frank; Trebilcock, Michael; Walker, Michael (eds.). The Law and Economics of Competition Policy. Vancouver, B.C.: The Fraser Institute. pp. 337–368. ISBN 978-0-88975-121-7.

External links edit

  • Orris Herfindahl, "Concentration in the steel industry", 1950, published on Archive.org with consent of his heirs in June 2021, Dissertation on Archive.org
  • World Integrated Trade Solution, Calculate Herfindahl-Hirschman Index using UNSD COMTRADE data
  • US Department of Justice market concentration cutoffs.
  • Herfindahl-Hirschman Index Calculator. Web tool for calculating pre- and post-merger Herfindahl index.
  • Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission 2010 Horizontal Merger Guidelines. More detailed information about mergers, market concentration, and competition (from the Department of Justice).

herfindahl, hirschman, index, this, article, about, economic, measure, author, level, metric, index, herfindahl, index, also, known, herfindahl, hirschman, index, sometimes, score, measure, size, firms, relation, industry, they, indicator, amount, competition,. This article is about the economic measure For the author level metric see H index The Herfindahl index also known as Herfindahl Hirschman Index HHI or sometimes HHI score is a measure of the size of firms in relation to the industry they are in and is an indicator of the amount of competition among them Named after economists Orris C Herfindahl and Albert O Hirschman it is an economic concept widely applied in competition law antitrust regulation 1 and technology management 2 HHI has continued to be used by antitrust authorities primarily to evaluate and understand how mergers will affect their associated markets 3 HHI is calculated by squaring the market share of each competing firm in the industry and then summing the resulting numbers 4 sometimes limited to the 50 largest firms 5 6 The result is proportional to the average market share weighted by market share As such it can range from 0 to 1 0 moving from a huge number of very small firms to a single monopolistic producer Increases in the HHI generally indicate a decrease in competition and an increase of market power whereas decreases indicate the opposite Alternatively the index can be expressed per 10 000 points For example an index of 25 is the same as 2 500 points The major benefit of the Herfindahl index in relation to measures such as the concentration ratio is that the HHI gives more weight to larger firms Other advantages of the HHI include its simple calculation method and the small amount of often easily obtainable data required for the calculation 7 The HHI has the same formula as the Simpson diversity index which is a diversity index used in ecology the inverse participation ratio IPR in physics and the inverse of the effective number of parties index in political science Contents 1 Example 2 Formula 3 Problems 4 Intuition 4 1 Appearance in market structure 4 2 Effective assets in a portfolio 5 Decomposition 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksExample editConsider an example of 3 firms before and after a merger with the top 2 firms producing 40 of goods each and the other firm producing 20 Prior to Merger 0 4 2 0 4 2 0 2 2 0 36 36 displaystyle 0 4 2 0 4 2 0 2 2 0 36 36 nbsp 8 Now let s consider the top 2 firms merging Post Merger 0 4 0 4 2 0 2 2 0 68 68 displaystyle 0 4 0 4 2 0 2 2 0 68 68 nbsp 8 As can be seen prior to the merger the HHI while not low is in a range that allows for strong competition However post merger the HHI reaches 68 approaching a HHI consistent with monopolies This high HHI would lead to weak competition 8 This demonstrates how the HHI enables antitrust authorities to understand the impact that mergers have on the market 3 The index involves taking the market share of the respective market competitors squaring it and adding them together e g in the market for X company A has 30 B C D E and F have 10 each and G through to Z have 1 each When calculating HHI the post merger level of the HHI score and the total increase of the HHI score are considered when reviewing the outcome If the resulting figure is above a certain threshold then economists will consider the market to have a high concentration e g market X s concentration is 0 142 or 14 2 This threshold is considered to be 0 25 in the U S 9 while the EU prefers to focus on the level of change for instance that concern is raised if there is a 0 025 change when the index already shows a concentration of 0 1 10 So to take the example if in market X company B with 10 market share suddenly bought out the shares of company C with 10 also then this new market concentration would make the index jump to 0 162 Here it can be seen that it would not be relevant for merger law in the U S being under 0 18 or in the EU because there is not a change over 0 025 Formula editH H I i 1 N M S i 2 displaystyle HHI sum i 1 N MS i 2 nbsp where M S i textstyle MS i nbsp is the market share of firm i displaystyle i nbsp in the market and N displaystyle N nbsp is the number of firms 8 Therefore in a market with 5 firms each producing 20 the HHI would be 0 2 2 0 2 2 0 2 2 0 2 2 0 2 2 0 20 displaystyle 0 2 2 0 2 2 0 2 2 0 2 2 0 2 2 0 20 nbsp The Herfindahl Index HHI ranges from 1 N in case of perfect competition to 1 in case of monopoly where N is the number of firms in the market Equivalently if percents are used as whole numbers as in 75 instead of 0 75 the index can range up to 1002 or 10 000 nbsp Herfindahl Hirschman Index An HHI below 0 01 or 100 indicates a highly competitive industry Mergers and acquisitions with an increase of 100 points or less will usually not have any anti competitive effects and will require no further analysis 10 An HHI below 0 15 or 1 500 indicates an unconcentrated industry Mergers and acquisitions between 100 and 1500 points are unlikely to have anti competitive effects and will most likely not need further analysis 10 An HHI between 0 15 and 0 25 or 1 500 to 2 500 indicates moderate concentration Mergers and acquisitions that result in moderate market concentration from HHI increases will raise anti competitive concerns and will require further analysis 10 An HHI above 0 25 above 2 500 indicates high concentration 10 Mergers and acquisitions with HHI scores of 2 500 or above will be considered anti competitive and an in depth analysis produced if the scores are well above 2 500 they are considered to enhance market power they may only be allowed to progress when significant evidence is shown that the merger or acquisition will not increase market power 10 A small index indicates a competitive industry with no dominant players If all firms have an equal share the reciprocal of the index shows the number of firms in the industry When firms have unequal shares the reciprocal of the index indicates the equivalent number of firms in the industry Using case 2 we find that the market structure is equivalent to having 1 55521 firms of the same size There is also a normalized Herfindahl index Whereas the Herfindahl index ranges from 1 N to one the normalized Herfindahl index ranges from 0 to 1 It is computed as H H I H H I 1 N 1 1 N textstyle HHI cfrac left HHI dfrac 1 N right 1 dfrac 1 N nbsp for N gt 1 and H H I 1 displaystyle HHI 1 nbsp for N 1 where again N is the number of firms in the market and HHI is the usual Herfindahl Index as above Using the normalized Herfindahl index information about the total number of players N is lost as shown in the following example Assume a market with two players and equally distributed market share H 1 N 1 2 0 5 textstyle H dfrac 1 N dfrac 1 2 0 5 nbsp and H 0 displaystyle H 0 nbsp Now compare that to a situation with three players and again an equally distributed market share H 1 N 1 3 0 333 displaystyle H dfrac 1 N frac 1 3 approx 0 overline 333 nbsp note that H 0 displaystyle H 0 nbsp like the situation with two players The market with three players is less concentrated but this is not obvious looking at just H Thus the normalized Herfindahl index can serve as a measure for the equality of distributions but is less suitable for concentration Problems editThe usefulness of this statistic to detect monopoly formation is directly dependent on a proper definition of a particular market which hinges primarily on the notion of substitutability The index fails to take into consideration the complex nature of the market being tested 11 For example if the statistic were to look at a hypothetical financial services industry as a whole and found that it contained 6 main firms with 15 market share apiece then the industry would look non monopolistic However suppose one of those firms handles 90 of the checking and savings accounts and physical branches and overcharges for them because of its monopoly and the others primarily do commercial banking and investments In this scenario the index hints at dominance by one firm The market is not properly defined because checking accounts are not substitutable with commercial and investment banking The problems of defining a market work the other way as well To take another example one cinema may have 90 of the movie market but if movie theaters compete against video stores pubs and nightclubs then people are less likely to be suffering due to market dominance Another typical problem in defining the market is choosing a geographic scope For example firms may have 20 market share each but may occupy five areas of the country in which they are monopoly providers and thus do not compete against each other A service provider or manufacturer in one city is not necessarily substitutable with a service provider or manufacturer in another city depending on the importance of being local for the business for example telemarketing services are rather global in scope while shoe repair services are local The United States federal anti trust authorities such as the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission use the Herfindahl index as a screening tool to determine whether a proposed merger or acquisition is likely to raise antitrust concerns Increases of over 0 01 100 generally provoke scrutiny although this varies from case to case The Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice considers Herfindahl indices between 0 15 1 500 and 0 25 2 500 to be moderately concentrated and indices above 0 25 to be highly concentrated 4 However these indices scores are not rigid guidelines that must be followed while high levels of concentration is concerning they indices scores provide ways to identify which mergers and acquisitions are potentially noncompetitive There are other factors that need to be considered that will either help reinforce or counter the harmful effects of higher market concentration The Herfindahl Hirschman index is used as a starting point to gauge initial market power and then determine if additional information is needed to conduct further analysis on any potential anti competitive concerns 10 Intuition editWhen all the firms in an industry have equal market shares H N 1 N 2 1 N textstyle H N left dfrac 1 N right 2 dfrac 1 N nbsp The Herfindahl is correlated with the number of firms in an industry because its lower bound when there are N firms is 1 N In the more general case of unequal market share 1 H is called equivalent or effective number of firms in the industry Neqi or Neff 12 13 14 An industry with 3 firms cannot have a lower Herfindahl than an industry with 20 firms when firms have equal market shares But as market shares of the 20 firm industry diverge from equality the Herfindahl can exceed that of the equal market share 3 firm industry e g if one firm has 81 of the market and the remaining 19 have 1 each then H 0 658 displaystyle H 0 658 nbsp A higher Herfindahl signifies a less competitive i e more concentrated industry Appearance in market structure edit It can be shown that the Herfindahl index arises as a natural consequence of assuming that a given market s structure is described by Cournot competition 15 Suppose that we have a Cournot model for competition between n displaystyle n nbsp firms with different linear marginal costs and a homogeneous product Then the profit of the i displaystyle i nbsp th firm p i displaystyle pi i nbsp is p i P Q q i c i q i Q i 1 n q i displaystyle pi i P Q q i c i q i quad Q sum i 1 n q i nbsp where q i displaystyle q i nbsp is the quantity produced by each firm c i displaystyle c i nbsp is the marginal cost of production for each firm and P Q displaystyle P Q nbsp is the price of the product Taking the derivative of the firm s profit function with respect to its output to maximize its profit gives us p i q i 0 P Q q i P Q c i 0 d P d Q q i P c i displaystyle frac partial pi i partial q i 0 implies P Q q i P Q c i 0 implies frac dP dQ q i P c i nbsp Dividing by P displaystyle P nbsp gives us each firm s profit margin P c i P d P d Q q i P d P P d Q Q q i Q s i h displaystyle P c i over P dP over dQ q i over P dP P over dQ Q q i over Q s i over eta nbsp where s i q i Q displaystyle s i q i Q nbsp is the market share and h d log Q d log P displaystyle eta d log Q d log P nbsp is the price elasticity of demand Multiplying each firm s profit margin by its market share gives us s 1 P c 1 P s n P c n P H h displaystyle s 1 left P c 1 over P right cdots s n left P c n over P right H over eta nbsp where H displaystyle H nbsp is the Herfindahl index Therefore the Herfindahl index is directly related to the weighted average of the profit margins of firms under Cournot competition with linear marginal costs Effective assets in a portfolio edit The Herfindahl index is also a widely used metric for portfolio concentration 16 In portfolio theory the Herfindahl index is related to the effective number of positions N eff 1 H displaystyle N text eff 1 H nbsp 17 held in a portfolio where H w 2 textstyle H sum w 2 nbsp is computed as the sum of the squares of the proportion of market value invested in each security A low H index implies a very diversified portfolio as an example a portfolio with H 0 02 displaystyle H 0 02 nbsp is equivalent to a portfolio with N eff 50 displaystyle N text eff 50 nbsp equally weighted positions The H index has been shown to be one of the most efficient measures of portfolio diversification 18 It may also be used as a constraint to force a portfolio to hold a minimum number of effective assets w 2 N eff 1 displaystyle w 2 leq N text eff 1 nbsp For commonly used portfolio optimization techniques such as mean variance and CVaR the optimal solution may be found using second order cone programming Decomposition editSupposing that N displaystyle N nbsp firms share all the market each one with a participation of x i displaystyle x i nbsp and market share s i x i j 1 N x j textstyle s i x i sum j 1 N x j nbsp then the index can be expressed as H 1 N N 1 s 2 textstyle H frac 1 N N 1 sigma 2 nbsp where s 2 displaystyle sigma 2 nbsp is the statistical variance of the firm shares defined as s 2 1 N 1 i 1 N s i m 2 textstyle sigma 2 frac 1 N 1 sum i 1 N left s i mu right 2 nbsp where m 1 N textstyle mu frac 1 N nbsp is the mean of participations If all firms have equal identical shares that is if the market structure is completely symmetric in which case s i 1 N displaystyle s i 1 N nbsp then s 2 displaystyle sigma 2 nbsp is zero and H displaystyle H nbsp equals 1 N displaystyle 1 N nbsp If the number of firms in the market is held constant then a higher variance due to a higher level of asymmetry between firms shares that is a higher share dispersion will result in a higher index value See the Brown and Warren Boulton 1988 and Warren Boulton 1990 texts cited below See also editConcentration ratio Marketing strategy Microeconomics N50 statistic a measure of concentration used in genomics Small but significant and non transitory increase in price a test to determine the relevant marketReferences edit United States Department of Justice 2010 5 3 Liston Heyes Catherine Pilkington Alan February 2004 Inventive concentration in the production of green technology A comparative analysis of fuel cell patents Science and Public Policy 34 1 Beech Tree Publishing 15 25 doi 10 3152 147154304781780190 a b Roberts Toby April 2014 When Bigger Is Better A Critique of the Herfindahl Hirschman Index s Use to Evaluate Mergers in Network Industries PDF Pace Law Review 34 2 894 946 ISSN 0272 2410 a b Herfindahl Hirschman Index justice gov United States Department of Justice July 31 2018 Retrieved January 19 2023 Parkin Michael 2002 Chapter 9 Organizing Production PDF Economics 6th ed Boston MA Addison Wesley Pearson Education pp 155 166 ISBN 9780321112057 Retrieved January 19 2023 Parkin Michael Bade Robin 2006 Chapter 9 Organizing Production Solutions to Problems PDF Economics Canada in the Global Environment Solutions to Problems 6th ed Pearson Education Canada pp 30 32 ISBN 978 0321312686 via St Francis Xavier University Maverick J B September 21 2021 What Are the Benefits and Shortfalls of the Herfindahl Hirschman Index Investopedia Retrieved January 19 2023 a b c d Rhoades Stephen A March 1993 The Herfindahl Hirschman Index PDF Federal Reserve Bulletin 79 March Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis 188 189 United States Department of Justice 2010 5 3 a b c d e f g Horizontal Merger Guidelines 08 19 2010 justice gov United States Department of Justice August 19 2010 Retrieved January 19 2023 Bromberg Michael November 21 2022 Herfindahl Hirschman Index HHI Definition Formula and Example Investopedia Retrieved January 19 2023 Kelly Jr William A July 1981 A Generalized Interpretation of the Herfindahl Index Southern Economic Journal 48 1 Southern Economic Association 50 57 doi 10 2307 1058595 JSTOR 1058595 Adelman M A February 1969 Comment on the H Concentration Measure as a Numbers Equivalent The Review of Economics and Statistics 51 1 The MIT Press 99 101 doi 10 2307 1926955 JSTOR 1926955 Bishop Robert L December 1952 Elasticities Cross Elasticities and Market Relationships The American Economic Review 42 5 American Economic Association 780 803 JSTOR 1812527 Viscusi W Kip Harrington Jr Joseph Emmett Sappington David Edward Michael 2018 Economics of Regulation and Antitrust Fifth ed Cambridge Massachusetts The MIT Press pp 177 178 ISBN 9780262038065 LCCN 2017056198 Lovett William Anthony 1988 Banking and Financial Institutions Law in a Nutshell 2nd ed West Publishing Company ISBN 9780314414434 Bouchaud Jean Philippe Potters Marc Aguilar Jean Pierre July 1997 Missing Information and Asset Allocation arXiv cond mat 9707042 Bibcode 1997cond mat 7042B Woerheide Walt J Persson Don 1993 An Index of Portfolio Diversification PDF Financial Services Review 2 2 73 85 doi 10 1016 1057 0810 92 90003 U ISSN 1057 0810 S2CID 18548005 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 03 23 Further reading editBrown Donald M Warren Boulton Frederick R May 11 1988 Testing the Structure Competition Relationship on Cross Sectional Firm Data Report Discussion paper 88 6 Washington D C Economic Analysis Group U S Department of Justice Antitrust Division OCLC 221796344 Capozza Dennis R Lee Sohan 1996 Portfolio Characteristics and Net Asset Values in REITs The Canadian Journal of Economics 29 Special Issue Part 2 S520 S526 doi 10 2307 136100 JSTOR 136100 Hirschman Albert O 1964 The Paternity of an Index The American Economic Review 54 5 American Economic Association 761 762 JSTOR 1818582 Kwoka John E Jr 1977 Large Firm Dominance and Price Cost Margins in Manufacturing Industries Southern Economic Journal 44 1 183 189 doi 10 2307 1057315 JSTOR 1057315 Matsumoto Akio Merlone Ugo Szidarovszky Ferenc 2012 Some notes on applying the Herfindahl Hirschman Index Applied Economics Letters 19 2 181 184 doi 10 1080 13504851 2011 570705 S2CID 153436570 Warren Boulton Frederick R 1990 Implications of U S Experience with Horizontal Mergers and Takeovers for Canadian Competition Policy In Mathewson Frank Trebilcock Michael Walker Michael eds The Law and Economics of Competition Policy Vancouver B C The Fraser Institute pp 337 368 ISBN 978 0 88975 121 7 External links editOrris Herfindahl Concentration in the steel industry 1950 published on Archive org with consent of his heirs in June 2021 Dissertation on Archive org World Integrated Trade Solution Calculate Herfindahl Hirschman Index using UNSD COMTRADE data US Department of Justice market concentration cutoffs Herfindahl Hirschman Index Calculator Web tool for calculating pre and post merger Herfindahl index Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission 2010 Horizontal Merger Guidelines More detailed information about mergers market concentration and competition from the Department of Justice Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Herfindahl Hirschman index amp oldid 1187875354, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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