What drives firm productivity growth?

"This paper presents new evidence on the causal links between changes in the business environment and firm productivity growth. It contributes to the literature in three important aspects. First, it constructs a unique database merging information from two large firm-level databases. The sample...

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Main Authors: Anós Casero, Paloma, Udomsaph, Charles
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC 2009
World Bank
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19188381124919065639-What-drives-firm-productivity-.htm
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author Anós Casero, Paloma
Udomsaph, Charles
author_facet Anós Casero, Paloma
Udomsaph, Charles
collection Library items
description "This paper presents new evidence on the causal links between changes in the business environment and firm productivity growth. It contributes to the literature in three important aspects. First, it constructs a unique database merging information from two large firm-level databases. The samples of both databases are merged on four criteria-country, sub-national location, firm size, and year-producing a panel of 22,004 firms in eight economies of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union: Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia,, Poland, Romania, Serbia, and Ukraine. Second, the paper addresses shortcomings of earlier studies, namely reverse causation, multicollinearity, and unreliable productivity estimates. Firm productivity growth is estimated drawing on corporate financial data from manufacturing firms included in the AMADEUS database. Changes in the business environment are estimated from the World Bank Enterprise Surveys conducted in 2002 and 2005. Multicollinearity problems in the full model regression are mitigated by constructing a set of six aggregate indicators of the business environment (using principal component analysis). The paper finds that, over the period 2001 to 2004, an increase of one standard deviation in infrastructure quality, financial development, governance, labor market flexibility, labor quality, and market competition raises the total factor productivity of the average firm by 9.8, 7.8, 3.2, 3.4, 5.8, and 3 percent, respectively. Lastly, the paper decomposes firm productivity growth and ranks the relative impact of changes in these six aspects of the business environment by country, by firm size, and by industry."
format TEXT
geographic Bulgaria
Croatia
Czechia
Estonia
Poland
Romania
Serbia
Ukraine
id 19188381124919065639_9917b94a1e534ecbb9c4ccf83b6ba8d5
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 19188381124919065639_9917b94a1e534ecbb9c4ccf83b6ba8d5
is_hierarchy_title What drives firm productivity growth?
language English
physical 51 p.
Digital
publishDate 2009
publisher Washington, DC
World Bank
spellingShingle Anós Casero, Paloma
Udomsaph, Charles
enterprise level
manufacturing industry
productivity
profitability
statistics
What drives firm productivity growth?
thumbnail https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=116568093474
title What drives firm productivity growth?
topic enterprise level
manufacturing industry
productivity
profitability
statistics
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19188381124919065639-What-drives-firm-productivity-.htm