Lerner Index Calculator 2026 | Market Power & Monopoly Measure | OmniCalculator

Free Lerner Index calculator for 2026. Calculate market power using price and marginal cost. Includes Lerner Index formula, elasticity relationship, and monopoly power analysis.

Lerner Index Calculator 2026

Measure Market Power & Monopoly Degree

๐Ÿ“Š Market Power
โš–๏ธ Economics

Based on Abba P. Lerner's 1934 theory of monopoly power

What is the Lerner Index?

๐Ÿ“ˆ Lerner Index Definition

The Lerner Index (also called the Lerner Monopoly Index) is a measure of a firm's market power. It calculates the percentage markup of price over marginal cost. Developed by economist Abba Lerner in 1934, it remains a fundamental tool in industrial organization economics.

The index ranges from 0 to 1: A value of 0 indicates perfect competition (price equals marginal cost), while values approaching 1 indicate significant monopoly power (price far exceeds marginal cost).

P
Price
โˆ’
MC
Marginal Cost
รท
P
Price
=
L
Lerner Index

Lerner Index Calculator

Price & MC Method
Elasticity Method
Reverse Calculator

Calculate from Price and Marginal Cost

The selling price of the product/service
Cost to produce one additional unit

Calculate from Price Elasticity of Demand

Use absolute value (positive number)
Note: For profit maximization, a firm sets L = 1/|ฮต|. Higher elasticity (more substitutes) means lower market power.

Find Price or MC from Lerner Index

Value between 0 and 1
Lerner Index
0.00
Perfect Competition
0 - 0.33
Low Power
0.33 - 0.67
Moderate
0.67 - 1
High Power
$0
Price
$0
Marginal Cost
0%
Markup %
โ€”
Implied |ฮต|

The Lerner Index Formula

Basic Formula

Where P is the price charged and MC is the marginal cost of production.

Relationship to Price Elasticity

Where ฮต is the absolute value of the price elasticity of demand. This relationship holds for profit-maximizing firms.

Finding Price from Lerner Index

Finding Marginal Cost from Lerner Index

  1. Identify the Price: Determine the selling price of the product or service.
  2. Calculate Marginal Cost: Find the cost of producing one additional unit.
  3. Apply the Formula: L = (P โˆ’ MC) / P
  4. Interpret the Result: Values closer to 0 indicate competition; closer to 1 indicates monopoly power.
  5. Compare to Industry: Benchmark against typical values for your industry.

Interpreting the Lerner Index

Lerner Index RangeMarket Power LevelMarket StructureInterpretation
0.00NonePerfect CompetitionP = MC; no markup possible
0.01 - 0.20Very LowHighly CompetitiveNear-competitive markets, commodities
0.20 - 0.40Low-ModerateMonopolistic CompetitionSome product differentiation
0.40 - 0.60ModerateOligopolySignificant market power
0.60 - 0.80HighConcentrated MarketStrong pricing power
0.80 - 1.00Very HighNear-MonopolyDominant market position

Lerner Index by Industry (Examples)

IndustryTypical Lerner IndexMarket PowerNotes
Agriculture (Commodities)0.01 - 0.05Very LowNear-perfect competition
Retail Grocery0.05 - 0.15LowCompetitive, thin margins
Restaurants0.15 - 0.30Low-ModerateSome differentiation
Apparel/Fashion0.30 - 0.50ModerateBranding matters
Automobiles0.20 - 0.40ModerateOligopoly structure
Pharmaceuticals (Branded)0.60 - 0.90HighPatent protection
Software/Tech Giants0.50 - 0.80HighNetwork effects, switching costs
Utilities (Regulated)0.10 - 0.30Low (Regulated)Price controls limit markup

Lerner Index vs Other Market Power Measures

MeasureWhat It MeasuresRangeData Required
Lerner IndexPrice markup over MC0 to 1Price, Marginal Cost
HHI (Herfindahl)Market concentration0 to 10,000Market shares
Concentration Ratio (CR4)Top 4 firms' share0% to 100%Market shares
Rothschild IndexIndustry vs firm elasticity0 to 1Demand elasticities
Bain IndexExcess profitsVariesProfit, invested capital

Limitations of the Lerner Index

โš ๏ธ Practical Limitations

  • Marginal cost is difficult to measure in practice
  • Assumes single product (complex for multi-product firms)
  • Static measure; doesn't capture dynamic competition
  • Doesn't account for potential competition
  • Regulation may artificially constrain L

โœ… Advantages

  • Theoretically grounded in economics
  • Direct measure of pricing power
  • Works at firm level (not just industry)
  • Links to demand elasticity
  • Useful for antitrust analysis

Official Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good Lerner Index?+

"Good" depends on perspective. For firms, higher is better (more pricing power). For consumers and competition, lower is better (competitive pricing). Regulators often scrutinize industries with L > 0.5. Competitive markets typically have L < 0.2.

How do you calculate the Lerner Index?+

L = (P โˆ’ MC) / P. Example: If price is $100 and marginal cost is $60, L = (100 โˆ’ 60) / 100 = 0.40. This means the firm marks up 40% above marginal cost.

What does L = 0 mean?+

L = 0 means Price equals Marginal Cost (P = MC), the condition for perfect competition. The firm has no market power and cannot charge above cost.

Can the Lerner Index equal 1?+

Theoretically, L = 1 when MC = 0 (zero marginal cost), which occurs for pure digital goods or content with near-zero reproduction cost. In practice, values above 0.8 are rare and indicate extreme market power.

How is Lerner Index related to elasticity?+

For a profit-maximizing firm: L = 1/|ฮต|, where ฮต is price elasticity of demand. If demand elasticity is 2, then L = 0.5 (50% markup). Higher elasticity means more substitutes and lower pricing power.

Who invented the Lerner Index?+

Abba P. Lerner, a British-American economist, introduced it in his 1934 paper "The Concept of Monopoly and the Measurement of Monopoly Power." It remains a cornerstone of industrial organization economics.

Why is marginal cost hard to measure?+

Firms rarely track true marginal cost. Average cost is often used as a proxy, but this can over/underestimate MC. Multi-product firms have joint costs that are difficult to allocate. This is the main practical limitation of the Lerner Index.

Is a high Lerner Index illegal?+

No, having market power is not illegal. Antitrust law focuses on how that power was acquired (through illegal means) or abused (anticompetitive behavior), not the mere existence of pricing power. Patents legitimately create high L values.

Lerner Index vs HHI?+

They measure different things. HHI measures market concentration (structure); Lerner measures pricing power (conduct/performance). A firm could have high HHI but low Lerner if regulated, or moderate HHI but high Lerner if differentiated. Both are useful together.

Can Lerner Index be negative?+

Mathematically, if P < MC (selling below cost), L would be negative. This can occur with predatory pricing, loss leaders, or subsidized goods. Negative L indicates the firm is not profit-maximizing on that product.

Note: The Lerner Index is a theoretical measure. In practice, marginal cost data is rarely available, so researchers often use average variable cost or other proxies. Always consider context when interpreting results.

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Last Updated: January 2026