产业结构和经济稳定外文翻译.doc
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1、产业结构和经济稳定外文翻译 本科毕业论文外文翻译外文题目: Industrial structure and economic stability出 处: Applied economic letters 作 者: Sherrill Shaffer 原文: Motivated by prior results predicting contrasting linkages between industrial structure and economic stability, we present exploratory empirical evidence on this important
2、 issue. Consistent with the turnover hypothesis, we find that employment grew more steadily where business establishments in all sectors were larger, suggesting an offsetting benefit to the first-moment costs of establishment size identified by previous research. Consistent with the job-matching hyp
3、othesis, we find that employment grew more steadily where more establishments per capita operated in all sectors. Similar but less consistent results were also found regarding the stability of income growth. Introduction and Background The fundamental importance of economic performance has spawned a
4、n extensive literature on the empirical determinants of economic growth see Rajan and Zingales, 1998; Levine et al., 2000 for prominent examples. One recent discovery is that communities or local regions tend to experience more rapid growth of income or employment where businesses are smaller Shaffe
5、r, 2002, 2006a, b. A separate strand of research, meanwhile, has demonstrated the importance of studying the volatility of growth rates rather than merely their means Ramey and Ramey, 1995; Kurz, 2004; Ismihan, 2005; Bekaert et al., 2006. It is relevant in this regard that several studies Davis and
6、Haltiwanger, 1992; Rob, 1995; Davis et al., 1996 have found that jobs at smaller firms tend to be less permanent than at larger firms; while Ilmakunnas et al. 2005 have suggested that such turnover may actually be one reason for faster productivity growth, an unexplored implication is that the volat
7、ility of employment and income may be higher where businesses are smaller the turnover hypothesis. Conversely, heterogeneity among decision-makers due to human fallibility can result in greater variability of economic performance in more centralized decision processes Sah, 1991; Sah and Stiglitz, 19
8、91; Almeida and Ferreira, 2002, possibly suggesting that a local economy may exhibit greater stability where the average firms are smaller or more numerous. A similar outcome is predicted to the extent that a centralized decision processes are less successful at managing conflict and b distributiona
9、l conflicts impair efficient adjustments to exogenous shocks Rodrik, 1999; Almeida and Ferreira, 2002. In view of these contrasting considerations, an important empirical question is whether establishment size and other measures of industrial structure may be systematically associated with second mo
10、ment measures of economic performance. This article accordingly presents preliminary evidence of linkages between selected measures of industrial structure and the volatility of local income and employment growth rates. We use three measures of industrial structure, each distinguished by broad secto
11、r. As in Shaffer 2002, we measure average establishment size by number of employees and, alternatively, by dollars of value added, shipments or receipts. We also look at establishments per capita, motivated by two opposing considerations. Finding a new job should be easier in a market with more empl
12、oyers in a given sector, leading to more stable levels or growth rates of income and employment the job-matching hypothesis. But, ceteris paribus, smaller firms will tend to permit the coexistence of larger numbers of firms, in which case the documented employment turnover at smaller firms discussed
13、 above will tend to offset the stabilizing benefit of more numerous firms. Each of our measures of industrial structure is compiled separately for the manufacturing, wholesale, retail and service sectors. We relate these measures of structure to two second-moment measures of economic performance, th
14、e SD of annual real per capita income growth rates and the SD of the annual growth rate of total establishment employment. The results contribute to two separate strands of the literature, on empirical covariates with growth volatility and on macroeconomic effects of establishment size and other mea
15、sures of industrial structure. We find for all sectors that larger establishments and more establishments per capita are associated with more stable employment growth rates, consistent with the turnover and job-matching hypotheses. The same linkages are found for some but not all of the sectors with
16、 regard to the volatility of growth rates in real per capita income. The next section introduces the empirical model and the sample. Section III presents the results, while Section IV concludes. The Model and Sample We embed our key variables in a standard linear empirical growth equation, 1 Where Y
17、 is a measure of economic performance as discussed above, is an estimated intercept term, s is a measure of industrial structure as discussed above, x is a vector of control variables discussed below,andare estimated coefficients and is a stochastic error term. As in Bekaert et al. 2006, our SDs of
18、economic growth rates are measured over a 5-year period. As in prior studies of economic growth, the control vector includes the natural logarithm of population, the density of population per square mile of land area, a measure of education and initial median household income. Population is a measur
19、e of market size as in Cetorelli and Gambera 2001. It is also similar to the total labor force variable used in Ohuallachain and Satterthwaite 1992 and can be interpreted as measuring urbanization economies. If job-matching occurs more quickly or efficiently in more populous areas, then the estimate
20、d coefficient on this variable should be negative another implication of the job-matching hypothesis introduced above. Population density has been found significantly related to several first-moment measures of economic performance, possibly due to scale effects or to superior matching between firms
21、 and workers in denser markets Ciccone and Hall, 1996; Andersson et al., 2004; Carlino et al., 2007; Strumsky et al., 2005. If these benefits influence economic stability, as one might expect, then the estimated coefficient on population density should be negative in our model. Education is measured
22、 as the percentage of population aged 25 and over who have completed high school, and reflects the accumulated level of human capital. It is similar to measures used in previous studies of economic growth such as Rajan and Zingales 1998, Levine et al. 2000 and Cetorelli and Gambera 2001, with theore
23、tical linkages to average growth rates explored by Teles 2005. A related measure of education has been used in at least one study of growth volatility Bekaert et al., 2006. In addition, education was found to be positively associated with sectoral employment growth in US metropolitan areas by O hual
24、lachain and Satterthwaite 1992. If education contributes to economic stability as well, its estimated coefficient in our regressions should be negative. Initial median household income can reflect a convergence effect in first-moment measures of economic performance, as noted by Barro and Sala-i-Mar
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