Learning by Drilling: Inter-Firm Learning and Relationship Persistence in the Texas Oilpatch
Ryan Kellogg
No 15060, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc
Abstract:
This paper examines the importance of learning-by-doing that is specific not just to individual firms, but to pairs of firms working together in a contracting relationship. Using new, detailed data from the oil and gas industry, I find that the joint productivity of an oil production company and its drilling contractor is enhanced significantly as they accumulate experience working together. This learning is relationship-specific: drilling rigs generally cannot fully appropriate the productivity gains acquired through experience with one production company to their work for another. This result is robust to other ex ante match specificities. Relationship-specific learning is consequential because it implies that relationship stability is important to productivity. When two firms accumulate experience working together, relationship-specific intellectual capital is created that cannot be appropriated to pairings with other firms. If the relationship is broken, this capital is destroyed and productivity decreases, thereby giving firms an incentive to maintain long-term relationships. Accordingly, the data indicate that production companies prefer to work with drilling rigs which they have accumulated considerable experience rather than those with which they have worked relatively little. I demonstrate that this contracting pattern is difficult to explain with switching costs or ex ante match specificities alone.
JEL-codes: D24 L14 L71 Q40 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2009-06
Note: EEE IO PR
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (7)
Published as Ryan Kellogg, 2011. "Learning by Drilling: Interfirm Learning and Relationship Persistence in the Texas Oilpatch," The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Oxford University Press, vol. 126(4), pages 1961-2004.
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Journal Article: Learning by Drilling: Interfirm Learning and Relationship Persistence in the Texas Oilpatch (2011)
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