2008
DOI: 10.1257/aer.98.1.394
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Reallocation, Firm Turnover, and Efficiency: Selection on Productivity or Profitability?

Abstract: A pervasive finding in the burgeoning literature using business microdata is that firm turnover is high and that this churning process contributes substantially to aggregate (industry) productivity growth, as more productive entrants appear to displace less productive exiting businesses. A limitation of this research is that establishment-level prices are typically unobserved, resulting in within-industry price differences being embodied in productivity measures. If prices reflect idiosyncratic demand shifts o… Show more

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Cited by 1,433 publications
(699 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…On the one hand, it confirms the theoretical (Melitz 2003) and empirical (Foster et al 2008) finding that highly productive establishments set lower prices. This, on the other hand, stresses the importance of separating price effects from true productivity.…”
Section: Using Establishment and Employment Level Data From The Instisupporting
confidence: 80%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…On the one hand, it confirms the theoretical (Melitz 2003) and empirical (Foster et al 2008) finding that highly productive establishments set lower prices. This, on the other hand, stresses the importance of separating price effects from true productivity.…”
Section: Using Establishment and Employment Level Data From The Instisupporting
confidence: 80%
“…Foster et al (2008) make use of a dataset with information on output in physical quantities and revenues, confirming that revenue based productivity estimates embody price variation. Consequently, inference from revenue based and physical productivity estimates is different.…”
Section: Estimation Difficultiesmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…The employer-level (log) TFP estimated by Foster, Haltiwanger, and Syverson (2008) has exactly the same persistence, 0.7 annual, and higher volatility, 21 percent over five years. Given possible sources of measurement error, we find this to be in the ballpark; our model does not require implausibly volatile or transient measures of productivity.…”
Section: A Calibrationmentioning
confidence: 77%
“…The figure shows that under a plausible value forσ a , the range of values for σ ξ that would be consistent with the restrictions imposed by a common-prior specification is very large. 33 Empirical estimates of the volatility of firm-level productivity suggest settingσa between 0.2 to 0.43 (Abraham andWhite, 2006, Foster, Haltiwanger, andSyverson, 2008). In a similar setting as ours, Huo and Takayama (2015b) use a value of 0.14.…”
Section: Heterogeneous Vs Common Priors (Continued)mentioning
confidence: 79%