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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Total Factor Productivity'

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Annual Survey of Manufactures - 105

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International Trade Research Report - 8

University of Maryland - 8

Labor Productivity - 8

Kauffman Foundation - 8

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Review of Economics and Statistics - 8

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Value Added - 6

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Cumulative Density Function - 4

Company Organization Survey - 4

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New York Times - 4

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Statistics Canada - 4

Stanford University - 4

2SLS - 4

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Journal of International Economics - 4

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production - 103

manufacturing - 70

growth - 67

market - 60

produce - 56

investment - 54

macroeconomic - 53

econometric - 53

revenue - 51

expenditure - 48

sale - 45

industrial - 40

economist - 39

estimating - 39

economically - 39

efficiency - 38

demand - 36

recession - 36

labor - 35

productive - 34

acquisition - 34

gdp - 33

profit - 31

productivity growth - 28

company - 28

sector - 27

estimation - 25

monopolistic - 24

endogeneity - 24

merger - 24

earnings - 23

export - 22

depreciation - 22

employ - 21

technological - 21

innovation - 21

spillover - 21

industry productivity - 21

manufacturer - 20

plant productivity - 20

enterprise - 19

leverage - 19

firms productivity - 18

profitability - 18

productivity dispersion - 17

exporter - 17

aggregate - 16

productivity measures - 16

finance - 16

regression - 16

productivity plants - 16

quarterly - 15

financial - 15

incentive - 15

econometrician - 15

regulation - 15

organizational - 15

accounting - 14

inventory - 14

factor productivity - 14

factory - 14

rates productivity - 14

stock - 14

labor productivity - 14

equity - 13

aggregate productivity - 13

employed - 13

employee - 13

growth productivity - 13

corporate - 13

competitor - 13

acquirer - 13

statistical - 12

measures productivity - 12

workforce - 12

entrepreneurship - 12

investor - 12

patent - 12

takeover - 12

consumption - 12

cost - 12

multinational - 12

product - 12

debt - 11

payroll - 11

import - 11

technology - 11

productivity dynamics - 11

conglomerate - 11

heterogeneity - 11

gain - 11

endogenous - 11

producing - 11

dispersion productivity - 10

regress - 10

employment growth - 10

trend - 9

shareholder - 9

geographically - 9

shock - 9

investing - 9

invest - 9

industry concentration - 9

exogeneity - 9

tariff - 9

estimator - 9

spending - 9

emission - 9

pollution - 9

capital - 9

ownership - 9

estimates productivity - 8

productivity analysis - 8

exporting - 8

productivity estimates - 8

corporation - 8

firms plants - 8

plants industry - 8

subsidiary - 8

regulatory - 8

epa - 8

environmental - 8

strategic - 8

efficient - 8

plant - 8

profitable - 8

textile - 8

bank - 7

borrowing - 7

entrepreneur - 7

exported - 7

investment productivity - 7

productivity shocks - 7

innovating - 7

wages productivity - 7

plants firms - 7

externality - 7

level productivity - 7

monopolistically - 7

productivity differences - 7

establishment - 7

regulation productivity - 7

econometrically - 7

specialization - 7

manager - 7

yield - 7

analysis productivity - 7

declining - 7

exogenous - 7

bankruptcy - 7

quantity - 7

pricing - 7

commodity - 7

pollutant - 7

loan - 6

creditor - 6

average - 6

wholesale - 6

venture - 6

subsidy - 6

productivity impacts - 6

innovate - 6

city - 6

relocation - 6

plant investment - 6

regional - 6

competitiveness - 6

reallocation productivity - 6

area - 6

equilibrium - 6

share - 6

regressing - 6

metropolitan - 6

price - 6

productivity size - 6

management - 6

productivity increases - 6

liquidation - 6

productivity firms - 6

trading - 6

fluctuation - 6

impact - 6

consumer - 6

financing - 6

performance - 6

diversification - 6

contract - 5

asset - 5

report - 5

respondent - 5

retailer - 5

sector productivity - 5

occupation - 5

productivity variation - 5

entrepreneurial - 5

technology adoption - 5

prospect - 5

innovation productivity - 5

innovative - 5

worker - 5

relocate - 5

salary - 5

rent - 5

plant employment - 5

industries estimate - 5

productivity wage - 5

wage growth - 5

estimates production - 5

agriculture - 5

observed productivity - 5

technical - 5

larger firms - 5

security - 5

capital productivity - 5

recessionary - 5

budget - 5

managerial - 5

lending - 5

lender - 5

rate - 5

utilization - 5

volatility - 5

mergers acquisitions - 5

restructuring - 5

outsourcing - 5

environmental regulation - 5

costs pollution - 5

pollution abatement - 5

owner - 5

industry variation - 5

refinery - 5

polluting - 5

fund - 4

disclosure - 4

tax - 4

imputation - 4

commerce - 4

data census - 4

survey - 4

employment effects - 4

layoff - 4

shipment - 4

regressors - 4

invention - 4

researcher - 4

innovator - 4

patenting - 4

incorporated - 4

oligopolistic - 4

region - 4

manufacturing plants - 4

country - 4

sectoral - 4

downturn - 4

firms grow - 4

decline - 4

collateral - 4

estimates employment - 4

employment dynamics - 4

oligopoly - 4

bankrupt - 4

debtor - 4

expense - 4

buyer - 4

practices productivity - 4

forecast - 4

aggregation - 4

firms export - 4

exporting firms - 4

downstream - 4

good - 4

international trade - 4

regulated - 4

abatement expenditures - 4

manufacturing industries - 4

diversify - 4

data - 4

analysis - 4

borrow - 3

irs - 3

warehouse - 3

retail - 3

grocery - 3

percentile - 3

labor statistics - 3

manufacturing productivity - 3

state - 3

shift - 3

urban - 3

microdata - 3

relocating - 3

bias - 3

industry output - 3

labor markets - 3

geography - 3

regional economic - 3

local economic - 3

tech - 3

outsourced - 3

sourcing - 3

industry growth - 3

employment distribution - 3

hire - 3

trends labor - 3

employment production - 3

economic growth - 3

supplier - 3

energy - 3

autoregressive - 3

credit - 3

banking - 3

inflation - 3

heterogeneous - 3

hiring - 3

firms trade - 3

proprietor - 3

model - 3

unobserved - 3

development - 3

customer - 3

analyst - 3

agency - 3

trade models - 3

workplace - 3

valuation - 3

economic census - 3

advantage - 3

diversified - 3

plants industries - 3

measure - 3

study - 3

Viewing papers 41 through 50 of 206


  • Working Paper

    What Do Establishments Do When Wages Increase? Evidence from Minimum Wages in the United States

    November 2019

    Authors: Yuci Chen

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-19-31

    I investigate how establishments adjust their production plans on various margins when wage rates increase. Exploiting state-by-year variation in minimum wage, I analyze U.S. manufacturing plants' responses over a 23-year period. Using instrumental variable method and Census Microdata, I find that when the hourly wage of production workers increases by one percent, manufacturing plants reduce the total hours worked by production workers by 0.7 percent and increase capital expenditures on machinery and equipment by 2.7 percent. The reduction in total hours worked by production workers is driven by intensive-margin changes. The estimated elasticity of substitution between capital and labor is 0.85. Following the wage increases, no statistically significant changes emerge in revenue, materials or total factor productivity. Additionally, I nd that when wage rates increase, establishments are more likely to exit the market. Finally, I provide evidence that when the minimum wage increases the wages of some of the establishments in a firm, the firm also increases the wages for its other establishments.
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  • Working Paper

    Demographic Origins of the Startup Deficit

    July 2019

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-19-21

    We propose a simple explanation for the long-run decline in the startup rate. It was caused by a slowdown in labor supply growth since the late 1970s, largely pre-determined by demographics. This channel explains roughly two-thirds of the decline and why incumbent firm survival and average growth over the lifecycle have been little changed. We show these results in a standard model of firm dynamics and test the mechanism using shocks to labor supply growth across states. Finally, we show that a longer startup rate series imputed using historical establishment tabulations rises over the 1960-70s period of accelerating labor force growth.
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  • Working Paper

    MANAGING TRADE: EVIDENCE FROM CHINA AND THE US

    May 2019

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-19-15

    We present a heterogeneous-firm model in which management ability increases both production efficiency and product quality. Combining six micro-datasets on management practices, production and trade in Chinese and American firms, we find broad support for the model's predictions. First, better managed firms are more likely to export, sell more products to more destination countries, and earn higher export revenues and profits. Second, better managed exporters have higher prices, higher quality, and lower quality-adjusted prices. Finally, they also use a wider range of inputs, higher quality and more expensive inputs, and imported inputs from more advanced countries. The structural estimates indicate that management is important for improving production efficiency and product quality in both countries, but it matters more in China than in the US, especially for product quality. Panel analysis for the US and a randomized control trial in India suggest that management exerts causal effects on product quality, production efficiency, and exports. Poor management practices may thus hinder trade and growth, especially in developing countries.
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  • Working Paper

    Growing Oligopolies, Prices, Output, and Productivity

    November 2018

    Authors: Sharat Ganapati

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-48

    American industries have grown more concentrated over the last forty years. In the absence of productivity innovation, this should lead to price hikes and output reductions, decreasing consumer welfare. Using public data from 1972-2012, I use price data to disentangle revenue from output. Difference-in-difference estimates show that industry concentration increases are positively correlated to productivity and real output growth, uncorrelated with price changes and overall payroll, and negatively correlated with labor's revenue share. I rationalize these results in a simple model of competition. Productive industries (with growing oligopolists) expand real output and hold down prices, raising consumer welfare, while maintaining or reducing their workforces, lowering labor's share of output.
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  • Working Paper

    Automation, Labor Share, and Productivity: Plant-Level Evidence from U.S. Manufacturing

    September 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-39

    This paper provides new evidence on the plant-level relationship between automation, labor and capital usage, and productivity. The evidence, based on the U.S. Census Bureau's Survey of Manufacturing Technology, indicates that more automated establishments have lower production labor share and higher capital share, and a smaller fraction of workers in production who receive higher wages. These establishments also have higher labor productivity and experience larger long-term labor share declines. The relationship between automation and relative factor usage is modelled using a CES production function with endogenous technology choice. This deviation from the standard Cobb-Douglas assumption is necessary if the within-industry differences in the capital-labor ratio are determined by relative input price differences. The CES-based total factor productivity estimates are significantly different from the ones derived under Cobb-Douglas production and positively related to automation. The results, taken together with earlier findings of the productivity literature, suggest that the adoption of automation may be one mechanism associated with the rise of superstar firms.
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  • Working Paper

    Regulating Mismeasured Pollution: Implications of Firm Heterogeneity for Environmental Policy

    August 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-03R

    This paper provides the first estimates of within-industry heterogeneity in energy and CO2 productivity for the entire U.S. manufacturing sector. We measure energy and CO2 productivity as output per dollar energy input or per ton CO2 emitted. Three findings emerge. First, within narrowly defined industries, heterogeneity in energy and CO2 productivity across plants is enormous. Second, heterogeneity in energy and CO2 productivity exceeds heterogeneity in most other productivity measures, like labor or total factor productivity. Third, heterogeneity in energy and CO2 productivity has important implications for environmental policies targeting industries rather than plants, including technology standards and carbon border adjustments.
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  • Working Paper

    The Nature of Firm Growth

    June 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-30

    Only half of all startups survive past the age of five and surviving businesses grow at vastly different speeds. Using micro data on employment in the population of U.S. Businesses, we estimate that the lion's share of these differences is driven by ex-ante heterogeneity across firms, rather than by ex-post shocks. We embed such heterogeneity in a firm dynamics model and study how ex-ante differences shape the distribution of firm size, "up-or-out" dynamics, and the associated gains in aggregate output. "Gazelles" - a small subset of startups with particularly high growth potential - emerge as key drivers of these outcomes. Analyzing changes in the distribution of ex-ante firm heterogeneity over time reveals that the birth rate and growth potential of gazelles has declined, creating substantial aggregate losses.
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  • Working Paper

    Punctuated Entrepreneurship (Among Women)

    May 2018

    Authors: Matt Marx

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-26

    The gender gap in entrepreneurship may be explained in part by employee non-compete agreements. Exploiting exogenous state-level variation in non-compete policy, I find that women more strictly subject to non-competes are 11-17% more likely to start companies after their employers dissolve. This result is not explained by the incidence of non-competes or lawsuits; however, women face higher relative costs in defending against potential litigation and in returning to paid employment after abandoning their ventures. Thus entrepreneurship among women may be 'punctuated' in that would-be female founders are throttled by non-competes, their potential unleashed only by the failure of their employers.
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  • Working Paper

    Competition, Productivity, and Survival of Grocery Stores in the Great Depression

    April 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-24

    We study the grocery industry in Washington, DC, during the Great Depression using data from the 1929 Census of Distribution, a 1929'1930 survey by the Federal Trade Commission, and a 1935 business directory. We first document the differences between chains and independents in the Washington, DC, grocery market circa 1929 to better understand chains' competitive advantages. Second, we study correlates of survival from 1929 to 1935, a period of major contraction and upheaval. We find that more productive stores survived at higher rates, as did stores with greater assortment and lower prices. Presaging the supermarket revolution, combination stores were much more likely to survive to 1935 than other grocery formats.
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  • Working Paper

    Creditor Rights, Technology Adoption, and Productivity: Plant-Level Evidence

    April 2018

    Authors: Nuri Ersahin

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-20

    I analyze the impact of stronger creditor rights on productivity using plant-level data from the U.S. Census Bureau. Following the adoption of anti-recharacterization laws that give lenders greater access to the collateral of firms in financial distress, total factor productivity of treated plants increases by 2.6 percent. This effect is mainly observed among plants belonging to financially constrained firms. Furthermore, treated plants invest in capital of younger vintage and newer technology, and become more capital-intensive. My results suggest that stronger creditor rights relax borrowing constraints and help firms adopt more efficient production technologies.
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