A Richer Understanding of Australia’s Productivity Performance in the 1990s: Improved estimates based upon firm-level panel data
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Breunig, Robert
Wong, Marn-Heong
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Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), Research School of Social Sciences, The Australian National University
Abstract
Australia’s productivity performance is characterized by important differences across
continuing firms, frequent entry of new firms, and substantial exit of firms which, for one
reason or another, decide to cease production. These basic facts call into question the
appropriateness of measuring productivity using an aggregate production function that is
based upon a representative firm. This study relaxes the standard assumptions that
industries are comprised of a set of homogeneous firms, the set of which are constant
over time. Instead, we apply a semi-parametric production to continue production. The
model controls for the relationship between productivity shocks and input choices and the
inter-relationship between these and the decision to continue production. Using the
Business Longitudinal Survey we estimate an improved set of production functions for
twenty-five two-digit industries in Australia. We use these results to examine aggregate
industry-level productivity performance. We use a new aggregation method in
calculating these changes which allows us to separate productivity changes and output
composition changes which sheds new light on industry-level productivity performance
in Australia.
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