The Origins of Firm Heterogeneity: A Production Network Approach
Andrew Bernard,
Emmanuel Dhyne,
Glenn Magerman (),
Kalina Manova and
Andreas Moxnes
Journal of Political Economy, 2022, vol. 130, issue 7, 1765 - 1804
Abstract:
We explore firm size heterogeneity in production networks. In comprehensive data for Belgium, firms with more customers have higher total sales but lower sales and lower market shares per customer. Downstream factors, especially the number of customers, explain the vast majority of firm size dispersion. We rationalize these facts with a model of network formation and two-dimensional firm heterogeneity. Higher productivity generates more matches and larger market shares among customers. Higher relationship capability generates more customers and higher sales. Model estimates suggest a strong negative correlation between productivity and relationship capability and potentially large welfare gains from improving relationship capability.
Date: 2022
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Related works:
Working Paper: The origins of firm heterogeneity: a production network approach (2019)
Working Paper: The Origins of Firm Heterogeneity: A Production Network Approach (2019)
Working Paper: The Origins of Firm Heterogeneity: A Production Network Approach (2019)
Working Paper: The Origins of Firm Heterogeneity: A Production Network Approach (2019)
Working Paper: The origins of firm heterogeneity: a production network approach (2019)
Working Paper: The origins of firm heterogeneity: A production network approach (2019)
Working Paper: The Origins of Firm Heterogeneity: A Production Network Approach (2019)
Working Paper: The Origins of Firm Heterogeneity: A Production Network Approach (2017)
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