Aggregate Productivity and Productivity of the Aggregate: Connecting the Bottom-Up and Top-Down Approaches
Bert Balk
A chapter in Productivity and Inequality, 2018, pp 119-141 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract Productivity analysis is carried out at various levels of aggregation. In microdata studies the emphasis is on individual firms (or plants), whereas in sectoral studies it is on (groupings of) industries. An industry is an ensemble of individual firms (decision making units) that may or may not interact with each other. In National Accounts terms this is symbolized by the fact that industry (aggregate) nominal value added is the simple sum of firm-specific nominal value added. From this viewpoint it is natural to expect there to be a relation between industry productivity and the firm-specific productivities. Yet, microdata researchers do not appear to pay much attention to the interpretation of the weighted means of firm-specific productivities they employ in their analyses. In this paper the consequences of this are explored, based on a review of the literature. However, a structurally similar phenomenon happens in sectoral studies, where the productivity change of industries is compared to each other and to the productivity change of some next-higher aggregate, which is usually the (measurable part of the) economy. Though there must be a relation between sectoral and economy-level measures, in most publications by statistical agencies and academic researchers this aspect is more or less neglected. The point of departure of this paper is that aggregate productivity should be interpreted as productivity of the aggregate. It is shown that this implies restrictive relations between the productivity measure, the set of weights, and the type of mean employed. For instance, value-added based total factor productivities and output based weights require a harmonic mean, if additivity is assumed.
Keywords: Producer; Productivity; Aggregation; Bottom-up approach; Top-down approach; Index number theory; C43; D24; O47 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2018
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:prbchp:978-3-319-68678-3_5
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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-68678-3_5
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