Dublin Core
Titre
Corporate performances and market selection. Some comparative evidence
Sujet
[SHS:ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and finances
Description
Diverse theories of industry dynamics predict heterogeneity in production efficiency to be the driver of firms' growth, survival and industrial change, either through a direct link between efficiency and growth, or through an indirect effect via profitabilities, as more productive firms can enjoy higher profit margins which, under imperfect capital markets, allow them to invest and grow more. Does the empirical evidence bear such predictions? This paper explores the dynamics of selection and reallocation through an investigation of the productivity-profitability-growth relations at the firm level. Exploiting large panels of Italian and French industrial firms, we find that heterogeneity in efficiencies primarily yield persistent profitability differentials, whereas the relationships of corporate growth with either productivity or profitability appear much weaker, if at all existent. This suggests that selection forces are much less strong than usually assumed. Rather, the links between efficiency and corporate growth seem profoundly mediated by large degrees of behavioural freedom. The results robustly applies across different industrial sectors and across the two countries.
Créateur
Bottazzi, Giulio
Dosi, Giovanni
Jacoby, Nadia
Secchi, Angelo
Tamagni, Federico
Source
Industrial and Corporate Change
ISSN:0960-6491
Date
2009
Langue
ENG
Type
other publication
Identifiant
http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00422142
http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/42/21/42/PDF/BoDoJaSeTa_LEM_WP.pdf