Identifying the Elasticity of Experience and Its Effect on Market Structure

10 Pages Posted: 17 May 2019

Date Written: April 18, 2019

Abstract

Experience is a factor of production. Practice makes perfect. But when prior production enters the firm's current production function, standard dynamic models of firm production like the Olley and Pakes (1996) proxy model suffer from a simultaneity problem. Furthermore, flexible inputs are chosen dynamically and firms may even choose negative markups temporarily to increase their stock of experience. So identification approaches that are based on assuming zero or positive markups will not work (like Gandhi, Navarro, and Rivers 2019). I develop an identification approach that works for this problem. My approach only requires panel data on firm input and output choice so it can be broadly applied. I use this appoach to study the evolution of learning rates (the rate at which firms learn from experience over time) and how differences in learning rates help explain differences in the firm size distribution across industries.

Keywords: learning by doing, production function estimation, production function identification, experience elasticity, endogenous sunk costs

JEL Classification: D24, L11, L23

Suggested Citation

Flynn, Zach, Identifying the Elasticity of Experience and Its Effect on Market Structure (April 18, 2019). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3374308 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3374308

Zach Flynn (Contact Author)

Afiniti ( email )

1701 Pennsylvania Ave
Washington, DC 20006
United States

HOME PAGE: http://zflynn.com

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