Abstract: By any measure, price deflators for semiconductors fell at a
staggering pace over much of the last decade. These rapid declines
are typically attributed to technological innovations that lower
constant-quality manufacturing costs. But, given Intel's dominance in
the microprocessor market, those price declines may also reflect
changes in Intel's profit margins. Disaggregate data on Intel's
operations are used to explore these issues. There are three basic
findings. First, the industry data show that Intel's markups from its
microprocessor segment shrank substantially from 1993-99. Second,
about 3-1/2 percentage points of the average 24 percent price decline
in a price index for Intel's chips can be attributed to declines in
these profit margins over this period. And, finally, the data suggest
that virtually all of the remaining price declines can be attributed
to quality increases associated with product innovation.
Keywords: Price indexes, multifactor productivity, semiconductors, high-tech industries, measurement
Full paper (112 KB PDF)
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Last update: April 5, 2002
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