Industry Switching in Developing Countries

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

Industry Switching in Developing Countries. / Newman, Carol; Rand, John; Tarp, Finn.

Helsinki : UNU-WIDER, 2011.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Newman, C, Rand, J & Tarp, F 2011 'Industry Switching in Developing Countries' UNU-WIDER, Helsinki. <https://www.wider.unu.edu/publications/working-papers/2011/en_GB/wp2011-049/>

APA

Newman, C., Rand, J., & Tarp, F. (2011). Industry Switching in Developing Countries. UNU-WIDER. https://www.wider.unu.edu/publications/working-papers/2011/en_GB/wp2011-049/

Vancouver

Newman C, Rand J, Tarp F. Industry Switching in Developing Countries. Helsinki: UNU-WIDER. 2011 sep.

Author

Newman, Carol ; Rand, John ; Tarp, Finn. / Industry Switching in Developing Countries. Helsinki : UNU-WIDER, 2011.

Bibtex

@techreport{b79e64b752bf4201bfcc0d50b7668d40,
title = "Industry Switching in Developing Countries",
abstract = "Firm turnover (i.e. firm entry and exit) is a well-recognized source of sectorlevel productivity growth across developing and developed countries. In contrast, the role and importance of firms switching activities from one sector to another is little understood.Firm switchers are likely to be unique both from newly established entrants and exiting firms that close down. We build an empirical model that examines switching behaviour based on data from Vietnamese manufacturing firms during the period 2001–08. Ourdiagnostic shows that switching firms have different characteristics and behaviour as compared to entry and exit firms. They tend, inter alia, to be labour-intensive and seek out competitive opportunities in labour-intensive sectors in response to changes in themarket environment. We also show that resource reallocations resulting from switching form an important component of productivity growth.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences",
author = "Carol Newman and John Rand and Finn Tarp",
note = "JEL classification: D21, L6, O14",
year = "2011",
month = sep,
language = "English",
isbn = "978-92-9230-416-4",
publisher = "UNU-WIDER",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "UNU-WIDER",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Industry Switching in Developing Countries

AU - Newman, Carol

AU - Rand, John

AU - Tarp, Finn

N1 - JEL classification: D21, L6, O14

PY - 2011/9

Y1 - 2011/9

N2 - Firm turnover (i.e. firm entry and exit) is a well-recognized source of sectorlevel productivity growth across developing and developed countries. In contrast, the role and importance of firms switching activities from one sector to another is little understood.Firm switchers are likely to be unique both from newly established entrants and exiting firms that close down. We build an empirical model that examines switching behaviour based on data from Vietnamese manufacturing firms during the period 2001–08. Ourdiagnostic shows that switching firms have different characteristics and behaviour as compared to entry and exit firms. They tend, inter alia, to be labour-intensive and seek out competitive opportunities in labour-intensive sectors in response to changes in themarket environment. We also show that resource reallocations resulting from switching form an important component of productivity growth.

AB - Firm turnover (i.e. firm entry and exit) is a well-recognized source of sectorlevel productivity growth across developing and developed countries. In contrast, the role and importance of firms switching activities from one sector to another is little understood.Firm switchers are likely to be unique both from newly established entrants and exiting firms that close down. We build an empirical model that examines switching behaviour based on data from Vietnamese manufacturing firms during the period 2001–08. Ourdiagnostic shows that switching firms have different characteristics and behaviour as compared to entry and exit firms. They tend, inter alia, to be labour-intensive and seek out competitive opportunities in labour-intensive sectors in response to changes in themarket environment. We also show that resource reallocations resulting from switching form an important component of productivity growth.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

M3 - Working paper

SN - 978-92-9230-416-4

BT - Industry Switching in Developing Countries

PB - UNU-WIDER

CY - Helsinki

ER -

ID: 35380351