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9 - Turnover and productivity growth

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 March 2010

John R. Baldwin
Affiliation:
Statistics Canada
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Summary

Like human beings firms are constantly being born that cannot live. Others may meet what is akin, in the case of man, to death from accident or illness. Still others die a “natural” death, as men die of old age. And the “natural” cause, in the case of firms, is precisely their inability to keep up the pace in innovation which they themselves had been instrumental in setting in the time of their vigour.

Joseph Schumpeter (1939: 69)

Introduction

Productivity growth and technical change have often been described as disembodied – a type of manna from heaven. Studies of productivity in the Solow growth-model tradition tend to ignore the contribution that the worldly process of competition makes to growth. This is not the picture of Schumpeter's world where innovation and turnover are linked. While some progress has been made by writers like Nelson and Winter (1982) and Scherer (1983) in dispelling the belief that technical change is bestowed in some ephemeral form, much remains to be done. When technical progress is described in a more earthly form, the narration proceeds in terms of such concrete phenomena as the aggregate labour and machines employed in an industry. While the endogeneity of innovation and technical change was stressed by Schumpeter (1942) and more recently by Rohmer (1986), improvements in productivity are rarely related, at least in empirical studies, to the dynamics of firm turnover.

Industrial economics has taken several tentative steps to measure certain aspects of this relationship; but none fits the various pieces of the puzzle together.

Type
Chapter
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The Dynamics of Industrial Competition
A North American Perspective
, pp. 208 - 238
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1995

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