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result(s) for
"Market share"
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Market Analysis of Drones for Civil Use
2023
This paper deals with the topic of market analysis of drones (or UAVs) for civil use. This is an analytical overview study. In the introduction, we offer an overview of the main historical milestones on the topic of drones. We then provide a classification and explanation of the main types of drones. The main part of the article contains structured information about the drone market, its status in terms of market shares and relative market shares. For a structured view of this market, we used the BCG method: we calculated the market growth and relative market shares. This market is dynamic and growing gradually. Established brands forming a strong competitive environment. In the photo-video segment, the Chinese brand DJI has a strong and dominant position. Demand on the consumer side is also growing, as is the reputation of the most used product brands.
Journal Article
Concentrating on the Fall of the Labor Share
by
Dorn, David
,
Van Reenen, John
,
Patterson, Christina
in
Competition
,
Economic models
,
Economic sectors
2017
The recent fall of labor's share of GDP in numerous countries is well-documented, but its causes are poorly understood. We sketch a “superstar firm” model where industries are increasingly characterized by “winner take most” competition, leading a small number of highly profitable (and low labor share) firms to command growing market share. Building on Autor et al. (2017), we evaluate and confirm two core claims of the superstar firm hypothesis: the concentration of sales among firms within industries has risen across much of the private sector; and industries with larger increases in concentration exhibit a larger decline in labor's share.
Journal Article
Should Your Brand Pick a Side? How Market Share Determines the Impact of Corporate Political Advocacy
2020
Consumers increasingly expect brands to \"pick a side\" on divisive sociopolitical issues, but managers are reluctant to risk alienating customers who oppose their position. Moreover, research on identity-based consumption and negativity bias suggests that corporate political advocacy (CPA) is more likely to repel existing customers who oppose the CPA than to attract new customers who support it, implying that the net effect will be negative even if consumers overall are evenly divided in their support/opposition. In this research, the authors posit that despite this negativity bias in individual-level choice, the net effect of CPA at the market level is determined by a sorting process that benefits small-share brands and hurts large-share brands. This is because having few customers to lose and many to gain can offset the risk of the negativity bias in consumers' identity-driven responses to CPA, potentially leading to a net influx of customers for small-share brands. Five experiments provide support for this theorizing and identify authenticity as a necessary condition for small share brands to benefit.
Journal Article
Platform envelopment
by
Eisenmann, Thomas
,
Van Alstyne, Marshall
,
Parker, Geoffrey
in
Bundling
,
Business innovation
,
Computer software
2011
Due to network effects and switching costs in platform markets, entrants generally must offer revolutionary functionality to win substantial market share. We explore a second entry path that does not rely upon Schumpeterian innovation: platform envelopment. Through envelopment, a provider in one platform market can enter another platform market, and combine its own functionality with that of the target in a multi-platform bundle that leverages shared user relationships. Envelopers capture market share by foreclosing an incumbent's access to users; in doing so, they harness the network effects that previously had protected the incumbent. We present a typology of envelopment attacks based on whether platform pairs are complements, weak substitutes, or functionally unrelated and we analyze conditions under which these attack types are likely to succeed.
Journal Article
Competition, Markups, and the Gains from International Trade
by
Edmond, Chris
,
Xu, Daniel Yi
,
Midrigan, Virgiliu
in
Competition
,
Economic competition
,
Economic models
2015
We study the procompetitive gains from international trade in a quantitative model with endogenously variable markups. We find that trade can significantly reduce markup distortions if two conditions are satisfied: (i) there is extensive misallocation, and (ii) opening to trade exposes hitherto dominant producers to greater competitive pressure. We measure the extent to which these two conditions are satisfied in Taiwanese producer-level data. Versions of our model consistent with the Taiwanese data predict that opening up to trade strongly increases competition and reduces markup distortions by up to one-half thus significantly reducing productivity losses due to misallocation.
Journal Article
Importers, Exporters, and Exchange Rate Disconnect
2014
Large exporters are simultaneously large importers. We show that this pattern is key to understanding low aggregate exchange rate pass-through as well as the variation in pass-through across exporters. We develop a theoretical framework with variable markups and imported inputs, which predicts that firms with high import shares and high market shares have low exchange rate pass-through. We test and quantify the theoretical mechanism using Belgian firm-product-level data on imports and exports. Small nonimporting firms have nearly complete pass-through, while large import-intensive exporters have pass-through around 50 percent, with the marginal cost and markup channels contributing roughly equally.
Journal Article
Financial Strength and Product Market Behavior: The Real Effects of Corporate Cash Holdings
2010
This paper shows that large cash reserves lead to systematic future market share gains at the expense of industry rivals. Using shifts in import tariffs to identify exogenous intensification of competition, difference-in-difference estimations support the causal impact of cash on product market performance. Moreover, the analysis reveals that the \"competitive\" effect of cash is markedly distinct from the strategic effect of debt on product market outcomes. This effect is stronger when rivals face tighter financing constraints and when the number of interactions between competitors is large. Overall, the results suggest that cash policy encompasses a substantial strategic dimension.
Journal Article
Foreign Banks: Trends and Impact
2014
Over the past two decades, foreign banks have become much more important in domestic financial intermediation, heightening the need to understand their behavior. We introduce a new, comprehensive database, made publicly available, on bank ownership (including the home country of foreign banks) for 5,324 banks in 137 countries over the period 1995-2009. We document large increases in foreign bank presence in many countries, but with substantial heterogeneity in terms of host and banks' home countries, bilateral investment patterns, and bank characteristics. In terms of impact, we document that the relation between private credit and foreign bank presence importantly depends on host country and banks' characteristics. Specifically, foreign banks only seem to have a negative impact on credit in low-income countries, in countries where they have a limited market share, where enforcing contracts is costly and where credit information is limited available, and when they come from distant home countries. This shows that accounting for heterogeneity, including bilateral ownership, is crucial to better understand the implications of foreign bank ownership.
Journal Article