Firm Heterogeneity in Macroeconomics

Firm Heterogeneity in Macroeconomics
Author: Allen Tran
Publisher:
Total Pages: 141
Release: 2014
Genre:
ISBN:

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Macroeconomic models are often estimated with aggregate data, aligning the aggregated behavior of firms and households in models to the data. However, using aggregate data alone can overlook important details of firm behavior that are crucial for understanding issues in macroeconomics. In this dissertation, I use data on firms at the micro-level to more accurately capture firms behavior and their interactions with one another. This approach is applied to answer questions that relate to the monetary policy transmission mechanism, economic growth from new entrants and welfare gains from new technology. A substantial literature exists which suggests that imperfect information across firms is capable of generating large monetary non-neutralities. In Chapter One, the level of imperfect information is taken from micro-data and used to discipline a standard menu cost model augmented with information frictions. In the model, imperfect information has a negligible effect and real responses to a monetary shock are small and transient in contrast to the bulk of the imperfect information literature. The selection effect dominates the effects of imperfect information as the level of dispersion in inflation expectations in the data is tiny. This result still holds even when the level of dispersion is set to that of the maximal observed levels of dispersion. Chapter Two presents data that suggests new entering establishments compete for customers, rather than inputs in order to grow. Consistent with the data, I present a model where customers satisfice in forming relationships with establishments in the presence of search frictions. The extent of these search frictions is a new margin that affects selection and allocative efficiency. As search becomes less random and more directed, customers are less willing to satisfice, improving allocative efficiency and inducing exit of slower growing firms. When search frictions in product markets are increased to match establishment dynamics in Chile, output falls by roughly 14 per cent relative to the model calibrated to the US, reflecting decreased allocative efficiency. Chapter Three studies the impact of online retail on aggregate welfare. I develop a new measure of store level retail productivity and with a spatial model, calculate each store's equilibrium response to increased competitive pressure from online retailers. From counterfactual exercises mimicking improvements in shipping and increased internet access, I estimate that improvements in online retail increased aggregate welfare from retail activities by 13.4 per cent. Roughly two-thirds of the increase can be attributed to welfare improvements holding fixed market shares, with the remainder due to reallocation. Surprisingly, 8.2 percent of firms actually benefit as they absorb market share from closed stores. Finally, I estimate that the proposed Marketplace Fairness Act would claw back roughly one-third of sales that would otherwise have gone to online retailers between 2007-12.

Firm Heterogeneity and the Macroeconomy

Firm Heterogeneity and the Macroeconomy
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 126
Release: 2014
Genre: Industrial efficiency
ISBN:

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The three chapters of this thesis contribute to a literature which emphasizes the importance of microeconomic heterogeneity for macroeconomic outcomes. In my work I focus on firm heterogeneity. I investigate the US labor market implications of a drop in the number of new firms, study the cyclical effects on productivity due to limits in the reallocation of capital across firms, and quantify the effectiveness of a policy which attempted to save jobs in Germany by altering firm incentives for lay-offs. The first chapter of this thesis investigates the role of new firms ('start-ups') in the US labor market. Start-ups and young firms grow faster and create more net jobs than older, incumbent firms. Yet since 2007 the number of start-ups in the US has declined by over 20%, accounting for a large part of the persistently high unemployment rate. I claim that this fact is related to the unprecedented fall in the value of real estate. Based on the empirical evidence I construct a model that captures the idea that start-ups require external financing, for which real estate is used as collateral. I calibrate and compute a quantitative competitive industry model with endogenous entry and exit, firm heterogeneity, labor adjustment costs, and aggregate shocks. It generates a 'jobless recovery' similar to what we observed in the US in the aftermath of the 2007-09 recession and is able to explain over 80% of the increase and persistence in unemployment since the recession. The second chapter, joint work with Russell Cooper, studies the productivity implications of frictions in the reallocation of factors. Recent empirical work has shown that misallocation of factors can have sizeable effects on the levels of aggregate output and productivity. We are interested in the question whether these frictions can also produce important cyclical movements. We find that the effects are quantitatively important in the presence of fluctuations in adjustment frictions and/or the cross sectional variation of profitability shocks. These fluctuations depend on higher order moments of the joint distribution of capital and plant-level productivity rather than mean values alone. Even without aggregate productivity shocks, the model has quantitative properties that resemble those of a standard stochastic growth model and match important facts about the cyclicality of reallocation and firm productivity dispersion. The last chapter, joint work with Russell Cooper and Moritz Meyer, studies the employment and productivity implications of short-time work ('Kurzarbeit') in Germany. During the years 2009-10 this policy was intended to provide incentives for firms to adjust labor input by reducing hours per worker instead of firing workers. Using confidential German firm micro data we estimate a model of costly labor adjustment. We use the estimated model to simulate the effects of the policy during the recent recession, trying to quantify in how far the German short-time work scheme reduced the allocative efficiency of the German labor market.

Heterogeneity in Firm Performance

Heterogeneity in Firm Performance
Author: Andreas Stierwald
Publisher: LAP Lambert Academic Publishing
Total Pages: 188
Release: 2011-09
Genre:
ISBN: 9783845477077

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Firm performance is of fundamental importance in economic analysis because the prosperity of an economy ultimately depends on its productivity which, in turn, depends on the success of rms. The objective of this book is to improve the understanding of what drives rm performance. It analyzes the causes and consequences of heterogeneity in rm performance using two common indicators: productivity and pro tability. The empirical investigation employs a panel dataset that comprises 1,206 large Australian rms and covers the period from 1995 to 2005. The results in this book highlight the heterogeneity in rm performance. The evidence suggests that there are substantial and persistent di erences in performance across rms, in particular with respect to productivity and profitability. Pro tability is predominantly determined by unique and fundamental characteristics of the rm, and productivity and productivity persistence are signi cant factors among them. The lack of industry e ects suggests that heterogeneity in rm performance is not necessarily related to market failure and anti-competitive behavior. There is no strong evidence that market failures are prominent in the economy.

Heterogeneity in Macroeconomics and its Implications for Monetary Policy

Heterogeneity in Macroeconomics and its Implications for Monetary Policy
Author: Fabian Schnell
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 180
Release: 2015-04-28
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 3658097310

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Fabian Schnell develops a model indicating that by keeping real interest rates too low, monetary policy can distort the allocation of resources across firms and potentially delay economic recovery after a recession. This is a new channel of monetary policy that is especially relevant in view of “Quantitative Easing” programs. A second model focuses on the short-term implications of heterogeneously productive firms, showing an acceleration effect of technology shocks. Finally, an empirical investigation of firms’ price-setting behaviors shows that time-dependent factors, relative to state-dependent ones, play a small role with respect to the probability and the size of a price change. All results provide new insights for monetary policy.

The Macroeconomic Impact of Firm-level Heterogeneity

The Macroeconomic Impact of Firm-level Heterogeneity
Author: Tom Schmitz
Publisher:
Total Pages: 77
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

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In this thesis, I show that macroeconomic models which take into account firm- and industrylevel heterogeneity provide a more precise understanding of productivity growth dynamics than models with just one firm or industry. The first chapter is dedicated to cyclical fluctuations in innovation, and highlights the role of the size distribution of innovating firms. Small and young innovating firms are especially important for innovation and productivity growth, but I show that they also suffer most from economic and financial crises. As a result, crises persistently shift the size distribution of innovating firms to the right, and this persistently depresses productivity growth. The size distribution also creates a link between growth and volatility at the industry level. In the second chapter, I analyse how firm-level innovation decisions and aggregate productivity growth are affected by expansions in international trade. I show that the growth effects of trade depend on whether its expansion is due to falling trade costs for products which were already tradable, or to the possibility to trade products which were not traded before.

Comparative Advantage and Heterogeneous Firms

Comparative Advantage and Heterogeneous Firms
Author: Andrew B. Bernard
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2006
Genre:
ISBN:

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This paper examines how country, industry and firm characteristics interact in general equilibrium to determine nations' responses to trade liberalization. When firms possess heterogeneous productivity, countries differ in relative factor abundance and industries vary in factor intensity, falling trade costs induce reallocations of resources both within and across industries and countries. These reallocations generate substantial job turnover in all sectors, spur relatively more creative destruction in comparative advantage industries than comparative disadvantage industries, and magnify ex ante comparative advantage to create additional welfare gains from trade. The relative ascendance of high-productivity firms within industries boosts aggregate productivity and drives down consumer prices. In contrast with the neoclassical model, these price declines dampen and can even reverse the real wage losses of scarce factors as countries liberalize.

Firm Heterogeneity and Performance in a Turbulent Economic Environment

Firm Heterogeneity and Performance in a Turbulent Economic Environment
Author: Antonios Georgopoulos
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2018
Genre:
ISBN:

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We examine the explanatory power of foreign ownership and domestic multinationality on firm performance among three different groups of sample firms over a turbulent economic period drawing on a unique dataset from Greece. Although the performance of each group of firms declines during the economic recession, we find that compared to Greek non-multinational enterprises (MNEs), foreign-owned firms show a profitability advantage, albeit at a lower profit performance level, and a much higher sales growth performance, considerably smoothing out fluctuations in sales. In turn, over the recession Greek MNEs do not achieve better performance compared to Greek non-MNEs, either in terms of profitability or of sales growth. This finding runs counter to the predominant view that the domestic multinationality factor matters, and prompts the need for future research to address particularly the performance impact of new multinationals from small and emerging economies. Hence, we suggest that neither domestic ownership nor domestic multinationality can boost firm performance in turbulent years.