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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'industry productivity'

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Frequently Occurring Concepts within this Search

production - 40

manufacturing - 33

industrial - 27

growth - 26

productivity growth - 20

produce - 18

sector - 16

expenditure - 16

productive - 15

sale - 14

productivity dispersion - 14

econometric - 14

revenue - 13

growth productivity - 12

efficiency - 11

productivity measures - 11

demand - 10

investment - 10

estimating - 10

manufacturer - 10

enterprise - 9

recession - 9

productivity dynamics - 9

market - 9

innovation - 9

dispersion productivity - 9

measures productivity - 8

macroeconomic - 8

technological - 8

firms productivity - 7

productivity differences - 7

aggregate productivity - 7

estimation - 7

labor productivity - 7

gdp - 7

product - 7

regression - 7

profit - 7

productivity increases - 6

labor - 6

factor productivity - 6

endogeneity - 6

earnings - 6

factory - 6

producing - 6

plant productivity - 6

profitability - 6

economically - 5

regressing - 5

productivity variation - 5

economist - 5

rates productivity - 5

monopolistic - 5

analysis productivity - 5

estimates productivity - 5

company - 5

technology - 5

organizational - 5

specialization - 5

productivity plants - 5

observed productivity - 5

industry growth - 4

industry concentration - 4

wages productivity - 4

acquisition - 4

productivity estimates - 4

manufacturing industries - 4

tariff - 4

manufacturing productivity - 4

commerce - 3

establishment - 3

reallocation productivity - 3

payroll - 3

aggregate - 3

employed - 3

regulation productivity - 3

level productivity - 3

industry variation - 3

inventory - 3

sectoral - 3

spillover - 3

depreciation - 3

export - 3

commodity - 3

productivity wage - 3

efficient - 3

industry output - 3

cost - 3

consumption - 3

heterogeneity - 3

regulation - 3

textile - 3

endogenous - 3

agglomeration economies - 3

econometrically - 3

Viewing papers 21 through 30 of 42


  • Working Paper

    Products and Productivity

    August 2008

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-22

    When firms make decisions about which product to manufacture at a more disaggregated level than observed in the data, measured firm productivity will reflect both true differences in productivity and non-random decisions about which products to manufacture. This paper examines a model of industry equilibrium where firms endogenously sort across products. We use the model to characterize the direction and magnitude of the resulting bias in productivity and to trace the implications for evaluating the aggregate effects of policy reforms such as industry deregulation. The endogenous sorting of firms across products provides a new source of reallocation and leads to biased measures of deregulation's impact on firm and aggregate productivity.
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  • Working Paper

    Industry Learning Environments and the Heterogeneity of Firm Performance

    December 2006

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-06-29

    This paper characterizes inter-industry heterogeneity in rates of learning-by-doing and examines how industry learning rates are connected with firm performance. Using data from the Census Bureau and Compustat, we measure the industry learning rate as the coefficient on cumulative output in a production function. We find that learning rates vary considerably among industries and are higher in industries with greater R&D, advertising, and capital intensity. More importantly, we find that higher rates of learning are associated with wider dispersion of Tobin's q and profitability among firms in the industry. Together, these findings suggest that learning intensity represents an important characteristic of the industry environment.
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  • Working Paper

    Import Price Pressure on Firm Productivity and Employment: The Case of U.S. Textiles

    March 2006

    Authors: Patrick Conway

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-06-09

    Theoretical research has predicted three different effects of increased import competition on plant-level behavior: reduced domestic production and sales, improving average efficiency of plants, and increased exit of marginal firms. In empirical work, though, such effects are difficult to separate from the impact of exogenous technological progress (or regress). I use detailed plant-level information available in the US Census of Manufacturers and the Annual Survey of Manufacturers for the period 1983-2000 to decompose these effects. I derive the relative contribution of technology and import competition to the increase in productivity and the decline in employment in textiles production in the US in recent years. I then simulate the impact of removal of quota protection on the scale of operation of the average plant and the incentive to plant closure. The methodology employs a number of important innovations in examining the impact of falling import prices on the domestic production of an import-competing good. First, import competition is modeled directly through its impact on the relative prices of monopolistically competitive goods along the lines suggested by Melitz (2000). Second, the effect of technology is incorporated through structural estimation of plant-level production functions in four factors (capital, labor, energy and materials). Solutions to econometric difficulties related to missing capital data and unobserved productivity are incorporated into the estimation technique. The model is estimated for plants with primary product in SIC 2211 (broadwoven cotton cloth). Results validate modeling demand as for differentiated products. Technological coefficients are sensible, with exogenous technological progress playing a large role. In the simulations run, the effects of foreign price competition are orders of magnitude higher than those of technological progress for the period after quotas on imports are removed. The large-scale reduction in employment and output in the US is shown to be a combination of reduced employment and output at plants in continuous operation and of plant closures that exceed new entries.
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  • Working Paper

    Product Choice and Product Switching

    October 2005

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-05-22

    This paper develops a model of endogenous product selection within industries by firms. The model is motivated by new evidence we present on the prevalence and importance of product changing activity by U.S. manufacturers. Three-fifths of continuing firms alter their product mix within an industry every five years, and added and dropped products account for a substantial portion of firm output. In the model, firms make decisions about both industry entry and product choice. Product choice is shaped by the interaction of heterogeneous firm characteristics and diverse product attributes. Changes in market conditions within an industry result in simultaneous adjustment along a number of margins, including both entry/exit and product choice.
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  • Working Paper

    Agglomeration, Enterprise Size, and Productivity

    August 2004

    Authors: Edward Feser

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-04-15

    Much research on agglomeration economies, and particularly recent work that builds on Marshall's concept of the industrial district, postulates that benefits derived from proximity between businesses are strongest for small enterprises (Humphrey 1995, Sweeney and Feser 1998). With internal economies a function of the shape of the average cost curve and level of production, and external economies in shifts of that curve, a small firm enjoying external economies characteristic of industrial districts (or complexes or simply urbanized areas) may face the same average costs as the larger firm producing a higher volume of output (Oughton and Whittam 1997; Carlsson 1996; Humphrey 1995). Thus we observe the seeming paradox of large firms that enjoy internal economies of scale co-existing with smaller enterprises that should, by all accounts, be operating below minimum efficient scale. With the Birch-inspired debate on the relative job- and innovation-generating capacity of small and large firms abating (Ettlinger 1997), research on the small firm sector has shifted to an examination of the business strategies and sources of competitiveness of small enterprises (e.g., Pratten 1991, Nooteboom 1993). Technological external scale economies are a key feature of this research (Oughton and Whittam 1997).
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  • Working Paper

    A Flexible Test for Agglomeration Economies in Two U.S. Manufacturing Industries

    August 2004

    Authors: Edward Feser

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-04-14

    This paper uses the inverse input demand function framework of Kim (1992) to test for economies of industry and urban size in two U.S. manufacturing sectors of differing technology intensity: farm and garden machinery (SIC 352) and measuring and controlling devices (SIC 382). The inverse input demand framework permits the estimation of the production function jointly with a set of cost shares without the imposition of prior economic restrictions. Tests using plant-level data suggest the presence of population scale (urbanization) economies in the moderate- to low-technology farm and garden machinery sector and industry scale (localization) economies in the higher technology measuring and controlling devices sector. The efficiency and generality of the inverse input demand approach are particularly appropriate for micro-level studies of agglomeration economies where prior assumptions regarding homogeneity and homotheticity are less appropriate.
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  • Working Paper

    Tracing the Sources of Local External Economies

    August 2004

    Authors: Edward Feser

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-04-13

    In a cross-sectional establishment-level analysis using confidential secondary data, I evaluate the influence of commonly postulated sources of localized external economies'supplier access, labor pools, and knowledge spillovers'on the productivity of two U.S. manufacturing sectors (farm and garden machinery and measuring and controlling devices). Measures incorporating different distance decay specifications provide evidence of the spatial extent of the various externality sources. Chinitz's (1961) hypothesis of the link between local industrial organization and agglomeration economies is also investigated. The results show evidence of labor pooling economies and university-linked knowledge spillovers in the case of the higher technology measuring and controlling devices sector, while access to input supplies and location near centers of applied innovation positively influence efficiency in the farm and garden machinery industry. Both sectors benefit from proximity to producer services, though primarily at a regional rather than highly localized scale.
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  • Working Paper

    The Link Between Aggregate and Micro Productivity Growth: Evidence from Retail Trade

    August 2002

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-02-18

    Understanding the nature and magnitude of resource reallocation, particularly as it relates to productivity growth, is important both because it affects how we model and interpret aggregate productivity dynamics, and also because market structure and institutions may affect the reallocation's magnitude and efficiency. Most evidence to date on the connection between reallocation and productivity dynamics for the U.S. and other countries comes from a single industry: manufacturing. Building upon a unique establishment-level data set of U.S. retail trade businesses, we provide some of the first evidence on the connection between reallocation and productivity dynamics in a non-manufacturing sector. Retail trade is a particularly appropriate subject for such a study since this large industry lies at the heart of many recent technological advances, such as E-commerce and advanced inventory controls. Our results show that virtually all of the productivity growth in the U.S. retail trade sector over the 1990s is accounted for by more productive entering establishments displacing much less productive exiting establishments. Interestingly, much of the between-establishment reallocation is a within, rather than betweenfirm phenomenon.
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  • Working Paper

    U.S. Productivity and Electronic Processes in Manufacturing

    October 2001

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-01-11

    Recent studies argue that the use of information technology is a significant source of U.S. productivity growth. Official U.S. data on this use have been scarce. New official data on the use of electronic business processes (business processes such as procurement, payroll, inventory, etc.,conducted over computer networks) in the manufacturing sector of the United States were recently released. Preliminary estimates based on these data are consistent with some results in the literature. However, they also raise questions requiring additional detailed micro data analysis.
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  • Working Paper

    Plant Vintage, Technology, and Environmental Regulation

    September 2001

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-01-08

    Does the impact of environmental regulation differ by plant vintage and technology? We answer this question using annual Census Bureau information on 116 pulp and paper mills' vintage, technology, productivity, and pollution abatement operating costs for 1979-1990. We find a significant negative relationship between pollution abatement costs and productivity levels. This is due almost entirely to integrated mills (those incorporating a pulping process), where a one standard deviation increase in abatement costs is predicted to reduce productivity by 5.4 percent. Older plants appear to have lower productivity but are less sensitive to abatement costs, perhaps due to 'grandfathering' of regulations. Mills which undergo renovations are also less sensitive to abatement costs, although these vintage and renovation results are not generally significant. We find similar results using a log-linear version of a three input Cobb-Douglas production function in which we include our technology, vintage, and renovation variables. Sample calculations of the impact of pollution abatement on productivity show the importance of allowing for differences based on plant technology. In a model incorporating technology interactions we estimate that total pollution abatement costs reduce productivity levels by an average of 4.7 percent across all the plants. The comparable estimate without technology interactions is 3.3 percent, approximately 30% lower.
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