Template-Type: ReDIF-Paper 1.0 Author-Name: David C. Maré Author-X-Name-First: David Author-X-Name-Last: Maré Author-Email: dave.mare@motu.org.nz Author-Workplace-Name: Motu Economic and Public Policy Research Author-Name: Richard Fabling Author-X-Name-First: Richard Author-X-Name-Last: Fabling Author-Email: richard.fabling@xtra.co.nz Author-Workplace-Name: Independent Researcher Title: Competition and productivity: Do commonly used metrics suggest a relationship? Abstract: We demonstrate the power of recently redeveloped productivity microdata to produce a range of meaningful competition indicators highlighting different aspects of industry competitiveness. Combining these competition metrics into composite indicators, we summarise the diverse range of competitive environments in New Zealand by clustering industries into four distinct groups. Estimating the relationship between competition and productivity within these groups provides some suggestive results that the tail of unproductive firms may be truncated when competition is greater, in part due to greater selection-to-exit based on productivity. Overall, the limited evidence we find for a direct relationship between competition and productivity does not necessarily imply that the two are unrelated, but more likely reflects that changes in competition in New Zealand over the sample period have not been particularly pronounced, making it difficult to identify a systematic relationship. Length: 52 pages Creation-Date: 2019-08 File-URL: https://motu-www.motu.org.nz/wpapers/19_16.pdf Number: 19_16 Classification-JEL: D22, D24, L11 Keywords: competition, profit elasticity, price-cost margin, industry concentration, multifactor productivity Handle: RePEc:mtu:wpaper:19_16