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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'factory'

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Frequently Occurring Concepts within this Search

Center for Economic Studies - 26

Longitudinal Research Database - 18

National Science Foundation - 17

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 15

Standard Industrial Classification - 15

Ordinary Least Squares - 14

Total Factor Productivity - 14

Cobb-Douglas - 14

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 13

North American Industry Classification System - 12

Longitudinal Business Database - 11

Census of Manufactures - 11

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 10

Economic Census - 7

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 7

Special Sworn Status - 7

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 6

Federal Reserve Bank - 6

World Bank - 6

National Bureau of Economic Research - 6

American Economic Review - 6

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 5

International Standard Industrial Classification - 5

World Trade Organization - 5

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 5

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 4

University of Chicago - 4

Business Register - 4

Survey of Manufacturing Technology - 4

Current Population Survey - 4

Columbia University - 4

Commodity Flow Survey - 4

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 4

Journal of Political Economy - 4

Review of Economics and Statistics - 4

Value Added - 3

Harvard University - 3

Business Research and Development and Innovation Survey - 3

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 3

Department of Economics - 3

Foreign Direct Investment - 3

Decennial Census - 3

TFPQ - 3

Environmental Protection Agency - 3

North American Industry Classi - 3

Computer Aided Design - 3

New England County Metropolitan - 3

Heckscher-Ohlin - 3

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 3

production - 37

manufacturing - 34

industrial - 26

growth - 23

econometric - 20

manufacturer - 17

produce - 16

labor - 14

sector - 14

technological - 13

expenditure - 13

export - 12

economist - 11

demand - 11

macroeconomic - 10

factor productivity - 10

technology - 10

spillover - 9

investment - 9

economically - 9

estimating - 8

innovation - 8

multinational - 8

efficiency - 8

market - 8

growth productivity - 7

enterprise - 7

productivity growth - 7

plant productivity - 7

specialization - 6

import - 6

merger - 6

endogeneity - 6

industry productivity - 6

consumption - 6

econometrician - 6

productivity plants - 6

company - 5

endogenous - 5

producing - 5

sectoral - 5

tariff - 5

supplier - 5

productive - 5

gdp - 5

organizational - 5

employ - 5

product - 5

estimation - 4

productivity dynamics - 4

development - 4

monopolistic - 4

regional - 4

country - 4

outsourcing - 4

outsourced - 4

acquisition - 4

externality - 4

exporter - 4

wholesale - 4

technical - 4

labor productivity - 4

agriculture - 4

productivity dispersion - 4

patent - 4

plants industry - 4

plants industries - 4

heterogeneity - 4

textile - 4

invention - 3

rates productivity - 3

innovate - 3

innovating - 3

monopolistically - 3

cost - 3

depreciation - 3

profit - 3

establishment - 3

exporting - 3

exported - 3

sale - 3

tech - 3

sourcing - 3

quantity - 3

productivity measures - 3

measures productivity - 3

productivity size - 3

revenue - 3

emission - 3

commodity - 3

fuel - 3

substitute - 3

price - 3

industries estimate - 3

labor markets - 3

disparity - 3

estimates productivity - 3

industry concentration - 3

industry variation - 3

conglomerate - 3

inventory - 3

regression - 3

manufacturing industries - 3

industrialized - 3

exogenous - 3

Viewing papers 31 through 40 of 51


  • 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

    Factor Price Equality and the Economies of the United States

    October 2005

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-05-21

    We develop a methodology for identifying departures from relative factor price equality across regions that is valid under general assumptions about production, markets and factors. Application of this methodology to the United States reveals substantial and increasing deviations in relative skilled wages across labor markets in both 1972 and 1992 . These deviations vary systematically with labor markets' industry structure both in cross section and over time.
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  • Working Paper

    Survival of the Best Fit: Exposure to Low-Wage Countries and the (Uneven) Growth of U.S. Manufacturing Plants

    October 2005

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-05-19

    This paper examines the role of international trade in the reallocation of U.S. manufacturing within and across industries from 1977 to 1997. Motivated by the factor proportions framework, we introduce a new measure of industry exposure to international trade that focuses on where imports originate rather than on their overall level. We find that plant survival and growth are negatively associated with industry exposure to low-wage country imports. Within industries, we show that manufacturing activity is disproportionately reallocated towards capital-intensive plants. Finally, we provide the first evidence that firms adjust their product mix in response to trade pressures. Plants are more likely to switch industries when exposure to low-wage countries is high.
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  • Working Paper

    Productivity Growth Patterns in U.S. Food Manufacturing: Case of Dairy Products Industry

    May 2004

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-04-08

    A panel constructed from the Census Bureau's Longitudinal Research Database is used to measure total factor productivity growth at the plant-level and analyzes the multifactor bias of technical change at three-digit product group level containing five different four-digit sub-group categories for the U.S. dairy products industry from 1972 through 1995. In the TFP growth decomposition, analyzing the growth and its components according to the quartile ranks show that scale effect is the most significant element of TFP growth except the plants in the third quartile rank where technical change dominates throughout the time periods. The exogenous input bias results show that throughout the time periods, technical change is 1) capital-using; 2) labor-using after 1980; 3) material-saving except 1981-1985 period; and, 4) energy-using except 1981-1985 and 1991-1995 periods. Plant productivity analysis indicate that less than 50% of the plants in the dairy products industry stay in the same category, indicating considerable movement between productivity rank categories. Investment analysis results indicate that plant-level investments are quite lumpy since a relatively small percent of observations account for a disproportionate share of overall investment. Productivity growth is found to be positively correlated with recent investment spikes for plants with TFP ranking in the middle two quartiles and uncorrelated with plants in the smallest and largest quartiles. Similarly, past TFP growth rates present no significant correlation with future investment spikes for plants in any quartile.
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  • Working Paper

    The Role of Technological and Industrial Heterogeneity In Technology Diffusion: a Markovian Approach

    February 2003

    Authors: Adela Luque

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-03-07

    Recent empirical studies have established the importance of intra and inter-industry heterogeneity in investment in innovation and other outcomes. This paper examines the role of industry and technology heterogeneity in the diffusion of advanced manufacturing technologies from a simple Markovian approach. Using the Maximum Entropy estimator, I estimate transition probabilities and corresponding half-lives, look for outliers in technology and industry diffusion patterns, and try to find explanations of their unusual behavior in idiosyncratic technology and industry characteristics. A consistent industry-level pattern that emerged is one that relates consumer demand and production processes. It seems that in industries where hand-made products are a sign of quality to the customer, technology spreads very slowly. On the other hand, in industries where demand for sophisticated, high-precision goods is high or in industries where demand-driven product specifications vary quite rapidly over relatively short periods of time, advanced technologies diffuse much more rapidly.
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  • Working Paper

    Who Dies? International Trade, Market Structure, and Industrial Restructuring

    June 2001

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-01-04

    This paper examines the role of changing factor endowments in the growth and decline of industries and regions. The implications of an endowment-based Heckscher-Ohlin trade model for plant entry and exit are tested on 20 years of data for the entire US manufacturing sector. The trade model provides predictions for which industries will see growth through the positive net entry of plants. A multi-region version of the same model has predictions for which regions will see high turnover and net entry of plants. In a country such as the U.S. that is augmenting both its physical and human capital, the least capital-intensive, least skill-intensive industries are correctly predicted to have the lowest rate of net entry. In addition, increases in regional capital and skill intensity are associated with higher probabilities of shutdown, especially for plants in industries with low initial capital and skill intensities.
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  • Working Paper

    Factor Substitution In U.S. Manufacturing: Does Plant Size Matter

    April 1998

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-98-06

    We use micro data for 10,412 U.S. manufacturing plants to estimate the degrees of factor substitution by industry and by plant size. We find that (1) capital, labor, energy and materials are substitutes in production, and (2) the degrees of substitution among inputs are quite similar across plant sizes in a majority of industries. Two important implications of these findings are that (1) small plants are typically as flexible as large plants in factor substitution; consequently, economic policies such energy conservation policies that result in rising energy prices would not cause negative effects on either large or small U.S. manufacturing plants; and (2) since energy and capital are found to be substitutes; the 1973 energy crisis is unlikely to be a significant factor contributing to the post 1973 productivity slowdown. of Substitution
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  • Working Paper

    Industrial Spillovers In Developing Countries: Plant-Level Evidence From Chile, Mexico And Morocco

    January 1998

    Authors: C.J. Krizan

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-98-02

    Recent trade and growth models have underscored the potential importance of external economies of scale. However, many of the most frequently modeled externalities have either not been measured or have been estimated with data too aggregate to be informative. In this paper, plant-level longitudinal data from Chile, Mexico and Morocco allow me to provide some of the first micro evidence on several types of external economies from plant-level production functions. The results indicate that in many industries own-industry output contributes positively to plant-level productivity. However, the effects of geographic concentration are mixed. Cross-country concentration, as measured by a geographic GINI index, often decreases productivity but within-province, same industry activity enhances it.
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  • Working Paper

    Industrial Spillovers in Developing Countries: Plant-level Evidence From Chile, Mexico, and Morocco

    January 1998

    Authors: C.J. Krizan

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-98-01

    This paper documents the procedure used to match firm-level data from the Quarterly Financial Reports (QFR) to plant-level (establishment) data from the Longitudinal Research Database (LRD). The resulting matched firms and their plants provide a link between a firm's financial structure and its manufacturing plants. The linked database provides a resource that researchers can use to examine the interaction of financial structure with firm decisions - including decisions such as employment, investment, mergers, and asset redeployment. Financial structure characteristics in the QFR include the composition and amount of debt claims.
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  • Working Paper

    The Structure of Firm R&D and the Factor Intensity of Production

    October 1997

    Authors: James D Adams

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-97-15

    This paper studies the influence of the structure of firm R&D, industry R&D spillovers, and plant level physical capital on the factor intensity of production. By the structure of firm R&D we mean its distribution across states and products. By factor intensity we mean the cost shares of variable factors, which in this paper are blue collar labor, white collar labor, and materials. We characterize the effect of the structure of firm R&D on factor intensity using a Translog cost function with quasi-fixed factors. This cost function gives rise to a system of variable cost shares that depends on factor prices, firm and industry R&D, and physical capital.
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