← Search

Using the H-Index of Concentration with Published Data

Richard Schmalensee

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1977

N theoretical discussions industrial organization specialists often indicate a preference for comprehensive or summary concentration indices over the more readily available concentration ratios. Such indices consider the entire size distribution of sellers in a market, and they give weight to both fewness of sellers and inequality of market shares. The most popular such measure is probably the H index of Hirschman (1945) and Herfindahl (1950). (See Hart (1975) for a discussion of alternatives and a list of references.) Let P1 be the share of the largest firm in an industry, measured in terms of sales, employment, or whatever scale variable is considered most relevant, let P2 be the share of the second largest firm, and so on, in a market with N sellers. Then H is defined by

DOI
10.2307/1928815
Volume
59 (2)
Pages
186
Export
BibTeX
Sources
openalex crossref