This paper explores the firm growth rate distribution in a Gibrat’s Law context. The aim is to provide an empirical exploration of the determinants of firm growth. The work is novel in two respects. First, rather than limiting the analysis to focus on the conditional mean growth level, we investigate the complete shape of the distribution. Second, we show that the differences in the firm growth rate process between large and small firms are highly circumstantial. That industry dynamics have a substantial influence on the relationship between firm size and firm growth. The data used includes more than 9000 Danish firms from manufacturing, services and construction. We provide robust evidence indicating that firm growth studies should be less...
To identify the determinants of firm growth within the Swedish retail – and wholesale trade industri...
We study size and growth distributions of products and business firms in the context of a given indu...
We introduce a model of proportional growth to explain the distribution Pg(g) of business-firm growt...
This paper proposes a general framework to account for the divergent results in the empirical litera...
We survey the phenomenon of the growth of firms drawing on literature from economics, management and...
This paper proposes a general framework to account for the divergent results in the empirical litera...
The nexus between firm growth, size and age in U.S. manufacturing is examined through the lens of qu...
Recent research has led to the empirical regularity that firm growth rate distributions are heavy ta...
Gibrat’s Law of proportionate effect, as applied to firms, states that the growth rate of a firm is ...
The Pareto-like tail of the size distribution of firms can arise from random growth of productivity ...
This paper is a sequel to the analysis of the growth process of firms presented in Chapters 4 and 5 ...
The purpose of this empirical study is to investigate whether the growth process of firms is best ex...
Using Danish firm data covering almost 9000 observations, we find significant proof that firm growth...
While Gibrat's Law assumes that growth rate variance is independent of size, empirical work has usua...
We use a dataset of 87,000 independent UK companies to investigate the relationship between firm siz...
To identify the determinants of firm growth within the Swedish retail – and wholesale trade industri...
We study size and growth distributions of products and business firms in the context of a given indu...
We introduce a model of proportional growth to explain the distribution Pg(g) of business-firm growt...
This paper proposes a general framework to account for the divergent results in the empirical litera...
We survey the phenomenon of the growth of firms drawing on literature from economics, management and...
This paper proposes a general framework to account for the divergent results in the empirical litera...
The nexus between firm growth, size and age in U.S. manufacturing is examined through the lens of qu...
Recent research has led to the empirical regularity that firm growth rate distributions are heavy ta...
Gibrat’s Law of proportionate effect, as applied to firms, states that the growth rate of a firm is ...
The Pareto-like tail of the size distribution of firms can arise from random growth of productivity ...
This paper is a sequel to the analysis of the growth process of firms presented in Chapters 4 and 5 ...
The purpose of this empirical study is to investigate whether the growth process of firms is best ex...
Using Danish firm data covering almost 9000 observations, we find significant proof that firm growth...
While Gibrat's Law assumes that growth rate variance is independent of size, empirical work has usua...
We use a dataset of 87,000 independent UK companies to investigate the relationship between firm siz...
To identify the determinants of firm growth within the Swedish retail – and wholesale trade industri...
We study size and growth distributions of products and business firms in the context of a given indu...
We introduce a model of proportional growth to explain the distribution Pg(g) of business-firm growt...