Report | Unions and Labor Standards

Kroger-Albertsons merger will harm grocery store worker wages: Workers stand to lose over $300 million annually

Policy Memo

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The problem: In October 2022, Kroger, the largest supermarket chain in the U.S., announced plans to acquire Albertsons, the second largest. The deal will reduce the number of outside employment options available to workers, lowering grocery store workers’ annual wages by a total of $334 million—about a $450 loss in annual wages per worker. 

What can be done about it:  In their rulings on the admissibility of mergers, anti-trust regulators like the Federal Trade Commission should consider wage losses stemming from increased labor market concentration, as well as the typical product market effects.

In October 2022, Kroger, the largest supermarket chain in the U.S., announced plans to acquire Albertsons, the second largest, for $24.6 billion—a deal that faces antitrust scrutiny from the Federal Trade Commission and state regulators.1 Historically, antitrust concerns have focused on the damage to consumers caused by concentration in product markets that gives large firms pricing power. However, a recent wave of economic research has called attention to potential damages to workers’ bargaining power over wages stemming from concentration in labor markets. In this policy memo, we discuss these labor market implications of the proposed merger. We find that the merger of two of the largest supermarket chains in the country will increase employer concentration and reduce the wages of all grocery store workers in affected cities across the country.

Workers’ ability to negotiate better pay and working conditions rests on their capacity to switch jobs. By decreasing the number of outside options available to workers, the merger will limit competition for hiring and retaining employees, and grocery store worker earnings will fall as a result. Crucially, the wage effects we identify are solely driven by this increase in labor market concentration. If the merger also leads to layoffs or hours cuts, this would add another dimension of damage to affected workers.

Our analysis uses grocery store employment and earnings data and the specific locations of Kroger and Albertsons stores. We find that:

  • The merger will lower wages for 746,000 grocery store workers in over 50 metropolitan areas of the U.S. Increased concentration will suppress wages for all grocery store workers in affected cities—not only those workers currently employed by Kroger or Albertsons;
  • The total annual earnings of grocery store workers will fall by $334 million in affected metropolitan areas;
  • Because Kroger and Albertsons employ about one quarter of all grocery store employees, most of the wage losses caused by the merger will be a negative externality that falls on grocery store workers employed by other firms. On average, all grocery workers in affected markets will lose about $450 per year in wage income;
  • Earnings losses will be smaller in areas with a stronger union presence or a tighter labor market. In areas with weaker worker bargaining power, workers will experience larger wage declines; and
  • The expected earnings losses are a pure windfall for the employers. In our analysis, wages fall solely because of a change in labor market power brought about by increased concentration. Quantitatively, this windfall represents a significant transfer of income from wages to profits: The decrease in wages is equivalent to 2% of Kroger and Albertsons’ profits or three times the companies’ CEO compensation.

Analysis

Recent research has established that concentrated labor markets can reduce worker pay.2 As explained in Abdela and Steinbaum (2018), much of this research estimates the expected change in average wages for a given change in employer concentration in a particular industry- or occupation-specific labor market.

This analysis uses estimates from that research and applies them to labor markets, which we define as grocery store industry employers or employees in metropolitan areas using the 4-digit North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) industry 4451, Grocery and Convenience Retailers.3 For each of these metropolitan area labor markets, total grocery store wage losses are calculated by estimating percent changes in employer concentration due to the merger and multiplying those concentration changes by the wage responses estimated in the research literature described above.

To estimate the percent change in concentration due to the merger, we first estimate the level difference in the metropolitan area grocery store industry concentration before and after the merger and then divide that level change by an estimate of the baseline, pre-merger concentration.

To estimate the pre-merger concentration levels, we choose an average pre-merger concentration level by relying on the existing research literature that calculates trends in retail or grocery concentration. Measuring concentration as the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) for 4-digit NAICS industries in commuting zones, Rinz (2022) found that the average HHI for the retail trade sector trended between 0.1 and 0.2 between 1976 and 2015.4 Zeballos, Dong, and Islamaj (2023) also calculated that the average HHI for two 6-digit industries associated with food retail markets in metropolitan areas rose from about 0.1 in 1990 to about 0.2 in 2019.5 In the following analysis, we choose a constant 0.15 as the average pre-merger concentration level in metropolitan areas for the grocery store industry. Coincidentally, 0.15 is the threshold at which the Department of Justice considers a market to be “moderately concentrated.”6

In our analysis, the pre- and post-merger difference in concentration levels assumes Kroger and Albertsons act as two separate firms prior to the merger and as one single firm after the merger, and then we calculate the level change in HHI where it is possible to estimate store-level employment for each Kroger and Albertsons store. This estimate is a linear prediction based on a subset of 153 stores for which we have employment estimates, square footage data, and Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) metropolitan area-level average employment per establishment.7

All told, this analysis covers 205 metropolitan areas containing 3,770 Kroger and Albertsons stores for which we can estimate store-level employment—and hence potential concentration changes—and for which we have 2022 QCEW data for baseline metropolitan area grocery store employment and earnings levels.8 According to the 2022 QCEW data, there are about 1.6 million grocery store workers in these cities and about 2.8 million grocery store workers nationwide. In 55 of these metropolitan areas, concentration will increase after the merger because these areas contain both Kroger and Albertsons stores.

Wages will fall on average for all grocery store workers in these areas due to the decrease in employer competition. (In other metropolitan areas, we assume there will be no wage change due to the merger because there is no estimated change in concentration.) The exact magnitude of the wage response is based on estimates published in Rinz (2022): Specifically, our analysis assumes that a 10% increase in concentration in a labor market will lower the average wage by 0.4%.9

Table 1 summarizes the results. The metropolitan areas with concentration increases contain 746,000 grocery store workers, and the total annual wage bill is $26.3 billion. Across these areas, earnings-weighted average concentration will increase by 32% because of the merger. As a result, wages will decline by 1.3%, given the assumed elasticity of wages with respect to a concentration of -0.04. The Kroger-Albertsons merger will cause annual wages to fall in these affected cities by a total of $334 million. On average, each of the affected 746,000 workers will lose about $450 in annual wage income.

Table 1

Estimated effects of the Kroger-Albertsons merger on grocery store workers

Metropolitan areas affected 55
Grocery store workers affected 746,000
Annual grocery store worker wages ($) $26,331,983,000
Annual wage losses ($) $334,020,000
Annual wage losses (percent) 1.3%
Annual wage losses per worker ($) $450

Notes: Total number of metropolitan areas, grocery store workers, and annual wage bill from 2022 Q1–2022 Q3 Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages and Kroger and Albertsons store locations, where grocery store workers are defined as NAICS 4451. Wage losses calculated as described in the text, from estimated concentration changes due to the merger, assuming a -0.04 elasticity of wages with respect to concentration.

Source: Author's analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) data series.

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Because the wage losses will, on average, affect every grocery store worker in a metropolitan area where there is a merger of Kroger and Albertsons’ stores, cities with large grocery employment bases will experience particularly large losses in total wage income. Table 2 shows the 10 largest wage losses by metropolitan area. For example, the merger will cause annual grocery store wages to fall by $51 million in the Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, California, metropolitan area and $32 million in the Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, Illinois-Indiana-Wisconsin, metropolitan area.

Table 2

Grocery store wage losses for the 10 largest metropolitan areas

Metropolitan area Annual wage loss Affected grocery store workers
Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA $51,398,000 107,965
Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN-WI $31,802,000 77,010
Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV $27,027,000 59,947
Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, TX $24,090,000 62,967
San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward, CA $23,370,000 41,978
Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX $21,800,000 53,001
Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA $16,781,000 33,069
Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA $15,411,000 33,975
Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, AZ $13,926,000 33,069
San Diego-Carlsbad, CA $12,437,000 27,029

Notes: Metropolitan areas, grocery store workers, and annual wage bill from 2022 Q1–2022 Q3 Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages and Kroger and Albertsons store locations, where grocery store workers are defined as NAICS 4451. Wage losses in this table assume a 1.3% annual wage loss, the average calculated in the text for all metropolitan areas with concentration changes.

Source: Author's analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) data series.

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The effects described above represent average losses, and some individual workers may experience larger or smaller wage declines. In particular, the losses may be reduced in labor markets where workers have more bargaining power. Benmelech, Bergman and Kim (2022), in the case of manufacturing, and Prager and Schmitt (2021), in the case of hospital workers, show that the negative wage effects of employer concentration are larger in areas where union density is below average or right-to-work laws reduce unions’ bargaining power. For example, union coverage rates in the grocery store industry are only 8% in the South, but 20% in the Northeast.

As wage declines entail significant losses for grocery store workers, they simultaneously represent sizable parts of Kroger and Albertsons’ bottom lines. Some reports estimate total employment at Kroger and Albertsons to be about 710,000 workers, about one quarter of the total 2.8 million employees in the grocery store industry.10 Accordingly, a reasonable expectation for wage losses for employees at Kroger and Albertsons is one quarter of the $334 million, or about $84 million. Since Kroger’s profits were $2.3 billion and Albertsons profits were $1.5 billion in 2022, the merger-induced decline in grocery store worker wages is equivalent to about a 2% increase in Kroger and Albertsons’ profits.11 Because grocery profits were relatively high in 2022, the wage reductions would represent an even higher share of “normal” pre-pandemic profits. The wage losses also represent a significant windfall for company executives: Wage losses for workers at Kroger and Albertsons are about three times the size of the total CEO compensation of the two companies.12

Conclusion

The Kroger and Albertsons merger will reduce the number of outside employment options available to workers and place downward pressure on grocery store workers’ wages. Based on existing empirical research showing the labor market effects of employer concentration, we find that the merger will permanently reduce the wages of 776,000 grocery store workers. Their annual earnings will fall by $334 million—about a $450 loss in annual wages per worker. If unionization rates were significantly higher in areas affected by the merger, union contracts and bargaining power could mitigate some of these losses.

Notes

1. For rankings, see Selyukh 2022.

2. For example, see Azar et al. 2020; Azar, Marinescu, and Steinbaum 2022; Benmelech, Bergman, and Kim 2022; Prager and Schmitt 2021; Qiu and Sojourner 2022; and Rinz 2022.

3. Although this analysis uses metropolitan areas to define the geographic boundaries of labor markets, using commuting zones obtains a similar percent change in wages: Wages fall by 1.3% using metropolitan areas and by 1.1% using commuting zones. We use the 4-digit NAICS aggregation level to define the grocery store industry because 4-digit NAICS industry groups underlie the analysis in Rinz 2022.

4. See Appendix Figure C14 in Rinz 2022.

5. See Figure 2 in Zeballos, Dong, and Islamaj 2023.

6. See U.S. Department of Justice 2018. Our analysis assumes a latent concentration level of 0.15—the midpoint of the average range 0.1 to 0.2 described in the text—yielding an estimated annual wage loss of $334 million. If we chose a different latent concentration level between 0.1 and 0.2, our estimated annual wage loss would lie between $250 million and $501 million.

7. The data on store locations, store square footage, and store employment was provided by analysts at the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union. For 153 stores for which we have both employment and square footage data, we regress log of employment on the log of square feet and log of QCEW employment per establishment and the interaction of the latter two terms. The fitted model has an R-squared value of 0.31. We use this model to predict employment at all Kroger and Albertsons stores.

8. While there are closer to 5,000 total Kroger and Albertsons stores, we examine only 3,770 stores because: (1) Some stores are in lower population regions that are not classified as metropolitan areas; (2) some stores are in areas for which area-wide grocery store employment and earnings data is suppressed in the QCEW; and (3) some stores we lack the square footage data used to estimate store-level employment. If additional data for these stores were available, they would mechanically raise the estimated increase in concentration and therefore increase the magnitude of associated wage losses.

9. The mean elasticity of wages with respect to HHI in Table 4 of Rinz 2022, columns 1 and 3, is -0.04.

10. See Selyukh 2022.

11. See Kroger Corporate 2023 and Albertsons Corporations 2023.

12. Kroger CEO compensation in 2021 was about $18 million, and Albertsons CEO compensation in 2021 was about $8.6 million. See Coolidge 2022 and Exec Pay 2021.

References

Albertsons Companies. 2023. “Albertsons Companies, Inc. Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year Results” (press release). April 11, 2023.

Abdela, Adil, and Marshall Steinbaum. 2018. Labor Market Impact of the Proposed Sprint–T-Mobile Merger. Economic Policy Institute, December 2018.

Azar, José, Ioana Marinescu, and Marshall Steinbaum. 2022. “Labor Market Concentration.” Journal of Human Resources 57, no. S: S167—S199.

Azar, José, Ioana Marinescu, Marshall Steinbaum, and Bledi Taska. 2020. “Concentration in US Labor Markets: Evidence from Online Vacancy Data.” Labour Economics 66, October: 101886.

Benmelech, Efraim, Nittai K. Bergman, and Hyunseob Kim. 2022. “Strong Employers and Weak Employees.Journal of Human Resources 57, no. S: S200–S250.

Coolidge, Alexander. 2022. “Kroger CEO Rodney McMullen Saw Pay Cut in 2021, While Worker Pay Rose.” Cincinnati Enquirer, April 27, 2022.

U.S. Department of Justice. 2018. “Herfindahl-Hirschman Index” (web page). July 31, 2018.

Exec Pay. 2021. “Vivek Sankaran” (web page). Accessed March 2023.

Kroger Corporate. “Kroger Reports Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2022 Results Announces Growth Expectations for 2023” (press release). March 2, 2023.

Prager, Elena, and Matt Schmitt. 2021. “Employer Consolidation and Wages: Evidence from Hospitals.” American Economic Review 111, no. 2: 397–427.

Selyukh, Alina. 2022. “Kroger and Albertsons Plan Merger to Combine 2 Largest Supermarket Chains.” NPR, October 14, 2022.

Qiu, Yue, and Aaron Sojourner. 2022. “Labor-Market Concentration and Labor Compensation.” ILR Review 76, no. 3: 475–503.

Rinz, Kevin. 2022. “Labor Market Concentration, Earnings, and Inequality.” Journal of Human Resources 57, no. S: S251–S283.

Zeballos, Eliana, Xiao Dong, and Ergys Islamaj. 2023. A Disaggregated View of Market Concentration in the Food Retail Industry. Economic Research Report 314, USDA Economic Research Service, January 2023.

 


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