Firm exit, vintage effect and the business cycle in Norway
Working paper
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Date
1998-12Metadata
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- Discussion papers (SAM) [663]
Abstract
In spite of the large and growing literature on producer heterogeneity and firm exit behavior, little
attention has been paid to the vintage capital theory of firm exits as an alternative hypothesis to
learning/selection. Interpreted at the firm level the vintage capital theory predicts that exit rates increase in the
age of capital. The present paper uses a panel of Norwegian manufacturing plants and constructs an index of
capital age in addition to the age of the establishment in order to disentangle the effects of selection/learning
and vintage capital on exit rates. The empirical results suggest a U-shaped exit function in the age of the plant
implying both a learning effect and a vintage capital effect. The vintage capital effect is present under different
assumption concerning reinvestments and controlling for unobserved heterogeneity. The exit rates are found to
depend on the business cycle in that exits increase in a severe downturn. Our results also support the assertion that recessions are periods of cleansing where old capital equipment is scrapped via exiting plants.
Publisher
Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration. Department of EconomicsSeries
Discussion paper1999:2