Decomposing Firm-level Sales Variation

Research output: Working paperResearch

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Decomposing Firm-level Sales Variation. / Munch, Jakob Roland; Nguyen, Daniel Xuyen.

Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2009.

Research output: Working paperResearch

Harvard

Munch, JR & Nguyen, DX 2009 'Decomposing Firm-level Sales Variation' Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen.

APA

Munch, J. R., & Nguyen, D. X. (2009). Decomposing Firm-level Sales Variation. Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen.

Vancouver

Munch JR, Nguyen DX. Decomposing Firm-level Sales Variation. Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen. 2009.

Author

Munch, Jakob Roland ; Nguyen, Daniel Xuyen. / Decomposing Firm-level Sales Variation. Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2009.

Bibtex

@techreport{a61b57605a6511dea8de000ea68e967b,
title = "Decomposing Firm-level Sales Variation",
abstract = "We measure the contribution of firm-specific effects to overall sales variation within a destination and find it remarkably low. Our empirical decomposition is structurally motivated by a heterogeneity model of exporting involving destination-specific, firm-specific, and firm-destination-specific latent effects with incidental truncation. We use a highly detailed dataset with exports by products and destinations for all Danish manufacturing fi…rms. We fi…nd the contribution of firm-specific heterogeneity to within-destination sales variation varies greatly across HS6 products, and that for the median product it drives 31% of the sales variation. When we remove first-time exports from our sample, the median value increases to 40%, implying that firm-destination-specific effects are most important the first year. We conclude that while firm-specific productivity can account for some of the variation, the majority is explained by firm-destination-specific heterogeneity sources such as firm-destination-specific demand.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Firm heterogeneity, firm-level export data, truncation correction",
author = "Munch, {Jakob Roland} and Nguyen, {Daniel Xuyen}",
note = "JEL classification: F12, C24",
year = "2009",
language = "English",
publisher = "Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Decomposing Firm-level Sales Variation

AU - Munch, Jakob Roland

AU - Nguyen, Daniel Xuyen

N1 - JEL classification: F12, C24

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - We measure the contribution of firm-specific effects to overall sales variation within a destination and find it remarkably low. Our empirical decomposition is structurally motivated by a heterogeneity model of exporting involving destination-specific, firm-specific, and firm-destination-specific latent effects with incidental truncation. We use a highly detailed dataset with exports by products and destinations for all Danish manufacturing fi…rms. We fi…nd the contribution of firm-specific heterogeneity to within-destination sales variation varies greatly across HS6 products, and that for the median product it drives 31% of the sales variation. When we remove first-time exports from our sample, the median value increases to 40%, implying that firm-destination-specific effects are most important the first year. We conclude that while firm-specific productivity can account for some of the variation, the majority is explained by firm-destination-specific heterogeneity sources such as firm-destination-specific demand.

AB - We measure the contribution of firm-specific effects to overall sales variation within a destination and find it remarkably low. Our empirical decomposition is structurally motivated by a heterogeneity model of exporting involving destination-specific, firm-specific, and firm-destination-specific latent effects with incidental truncation. We use a highly detailed dataset with exports by products and destinations for all Danish manufacturing fi…rms. We fi…nd the contribution of firm-specific heterogeneity to within-destination sales variation varies greatly across HS6 products, and that for the median product it drives 31% of the sales variation. When we remove first-time exports from our sample, the median value increases to 40%, implying that firm-destination-specific effects are most important the first year. We conclude that while firm-specific productivity can account for some of the variation, the majority is explained by firm-destination-specific heterogeneity sources such as firm-destination-specific demand.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Firm heterogeneity

KW - firm-level export data

KW - truncation correction

M3 - Working paper

BT - Decomposing Firm-level Sales Variation

PB - Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 12676798