Organizational Flexibility and Employment Dynamics at Young and Old Plants


Book Description

There are significant differences in the dynamics of employment over the business cycle between young and old manufacturing plants. Young plants are more sensitive to aggregate disturbances, and they respond to them along different margins. We interpret these differences as reflecting greater organizational flexibility at young plants due to the changing nature of a plant's environment as it ages. In the presence of aggregate uncertainty, differences between young and old plants' organizational flexibility allows the model to reproduce their distinct cyclical characteristics. Previous empirical studies show that small firms generally respond by more to aggregate shocks than do large firms. To the extent that small firms tend to operate young plants, our analysis suggests an alternative to conventional explanations of this evidence which appeal to imperfections in credit markets.




Organizational Flexibility and Employment Dynamics at Young and Old Plants


Book Description

The Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago presents the full text of the October 1998 working paper entitled "Organizational Flexibility and Employment Dynamics at Young and Old Plants," written by Jeffrey R. Campbell and Jonas D.M. Fisher. The text is available in PDF format. This paper examines the differences in the dynamics of employment over the business cycle between young and old manufacturing plants. The authors think these differences are due to to the changing nature of a plant's environment as it ages.




Working Paper Series


Book Description










NBER Reporter


Book Description







Savings of Young Parents


Book Description




The Fed in Print


Book Description




Do Endowments Predict the Location of Production?


Book Description

Examining the relationship between factor endowments and production patterns using international and Japanese regional data, we provide the first empirical confirmation of Ethier's correlation approach to the Rybczynski theorem. Moreover, we find evidence of substantial production indeterminacy. Prediction errors are six to thirty times larger for goods traded relatively freely. A compelling explanation of this phenomenon is the existence of more goods than factors in the presence of trade costs. This result implies that regressions of trade or output on endowments have weak theoretical foundations. Furthermore, since errors are largest in data sets where trade costs are small, we explain why the common methodology of imputing trade barriers from regression residuals often leads to backwards results.