Automation is generally associated with a labour share decrease. This effect varies depending on the sectoral market concentration. This paper claims that also the presence of highly specialised and geographically clustered firms might shape the automation-labour share relationship. If monopolistic behaviours characterize the market structure, a territorial market power effect may take place, exerting a detrimental role on the labour share. Based on a large-scale analysis of the manufacturing sector in European NUTS2 regions between 2011-2019, the paper proves – through the estimation of a pooled OLS regression – the existence of a territorial market power effect.

Territorial market power as a source of inequalities in the automation era

Roberta Capello;Camilla Lenzi;Elisa Panzera
2025-01-01

Abstract

Automation is generally associated with a labour share decrease. This effect varies depending on the sectoral market concentration. This paper claims that also the presence of highly specialised and geographically clustered firms might shape the automation-labour share relationship. If monopolistic behaviours characterize the market structure, a territorial market power effect may take place, exerting a detrimental role on the labour share. Based on a large-scale analysis of the manufacturing sector in European NUTS2 regions between 2011-2019, the paper proves – through the estimation of a pooled OLS regression – the existence of a territorial market power effect.
2025
automation
labour share
European regions
territorial market power
sectoral market power
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1300256
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