Measuring Total Factor Productivity Using the Enterprise Surveys: A Methodological Note
David C. Francis,
Nona Karalashvili,
Hibret Maemir and
Jorge Rodriguez Meza
No 9491, Policy Research Working Paper Series from The World Bank
Abstract:
Total factor productivity is a key element of economic growth and an important performance metric for policy makers. This note describes the methodology for measuring firm-level total factor productivity using the World Bank's Enterprise Surveys cross-country data. It also presents some estimates recovered from the production function. Two versions of the production function are estimated: one Cobb-Douglas, the other a more flexible translog specification. Both estimations are at the two-digit industry level pooling all the Enterprise Surveys data across economies. Evidence is found against using a Cobb-Douglas specification, which is more parsimonious, and in favor of using the flexible translog specification. The resulting firm-level estimates are all published in the Enterprise Surveys database with a unique firm identifier to link to the rest of the Enterprise Surveys data; because the estimates are reliant on new data, they are updated periodically as new Enterprise Surveys data become available. The results show that: (i) median firms operate close to constant returns to scale; (ii) gross-output and value-added production functions provide similar ranking of sectors in terms of output elasticities, capital intensity, and returns to scale; (iii) there is large, firm-level heterogeneity in output elasticities; and (iv) gross-output-based total factor productivity measures are less dispersed than the value-added ones.
Keywords: Common Carriers Industry; Food&Beverage Industry; Plastics&Rubber Industry; Textiles; Apparel&Leather Industry; Pulp&Paper Industry; Construction Industry; Business Cycles and Stabilization Policies; General Manufacturing; Employment and Unemployment; Information Technology; Transport Services (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020-12-08
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-eff and nep-ict
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (5)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:wbk:wbrwps:9491
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