This note considers several hypotheses regarding measurement error as a source of observed cross-sectional dispersion in plant-level productivity in the US textile industry. The hypotheses that reporting error and/or price rigidity in either materials and/or output account for a substantial portion of the observed dispersion in productivity are consistent with the data. Similarly, the hypothesis that transitory product niches or fashion effects lead to differential markups and consequently dispersion in observed productivity is consistent with the data. The hypothesis that transfer pricing problems lead to persistent differences in plant-level productivity, in contrast, does not appear to be consistent with the data. Finally, the hypothesis...
One of the most stylized facts about the United States economy is the procyclical behavior of aggreg...
Many papers have documented wide variations in productivity even in narrowly defined industries. Som...
There is substantial within-industry variation in the prices that plants pay for their material inpu...
Several reasons have been put forward to explain the high dispersion of productivity across establis...
Measuring the dispersion of productivity or efficiency across firms in a market or industry is rife ...
Ample evidence from micro data suggests that productivity at establishment level is dominated by idi...
We outline a novel procedure to identify the role of measurement errors in explaining the empirical ...
Plant level productivity in the ready-mix concrete sector is highly dis-persed, whereby a plant in t...
A startling fact of firm level productivity analysis is the large and persistent differences in both...
Plant-level data from US textile industries indicate : (1) significant cross-sectional dispersion in...
Tremendous differences in producer productivity levels exist, even within narrowly defined industrie...
This paper shows that imperfect output substitutability explains part of the observed persistent pla...
Abstract Large productivity dispersion within narrowly defined sectors is widely documented. However...
Using plant-level data, I show that the dispersion of total factor productivity in U.S. durable manu...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/88037/1/j.1468-2354.2011.00656.x.pd
One of the most stylized facts about the United States economy is the procyclical behavior of aggreg...
Many papers have documented wide variations in productivity even in narrowly defined industries. Som...
There is substantial within-industry variation in the prices that plants pay for their material inpu...
Several reasons have been put forward to explain the high dispersion of productivity across establis...
Measuring the dispersion of productivity or efficiency across firms in a market or industry is rife ...
Ample evidence from micro data suggests that productivity at establishment level is dominated by idi...
We outline a novel procedure to identify the role of measurement errors in explaining the empirical ...
Plant level productivity in the ready-mix concrete sector is highly dis-persed, whereby a plant in t...
A startling fact of firm level productivity analysis is the large and persistent differences in both...
Plant-level data from US textile industries indicate : (1) significant cross-sectional dispersion in...
Tremendous differences in producer productivity levels exist, even within narrowly defined industrie...
This paper shows that imperfect output substitutability explains part of the observed persistent pla...
Abstract Large productivity dispersion within narrowly defined sectors is widely documented. However...
Using plant-level data, I show that the dispersion of total factor productivity in U.S. durable manu...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/88037/1/j.1468-2354.2011.00656.x.pd
One of the most stylized facts about the United States economy is the procyclical behavior of aggreg...
Many papers have documented wide variations in productivity even in narrowly defined industries. Som...
There is substantial within-industry variation in the prices that plants pay for their material inpu...