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Firm-level productivity in Latin America and the Caribbean
Institution:1. Strategy and Development Effectiveness Department, IDB Invest, Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Department of Economics, Universidad de San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina;2. Department of Economics, Universidad de San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina;3. Strategy and Development Effectiveness Department, IDB Invest, Washington D.C., USA;1. GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies, Hamburg, Germany;2. CESifo, Germany;3. University of Hamburg, Germany;4. University of Passau, Germany;5. Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands;6. University of Göttingen, Germany;1. Pau Business School, France;2. CATT, University of Pau and Pays de l''Adour, France
Abstract:While the accumulation of factors of production, both physical and human capital, has helped Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) to narrow the income gap with developed economies, aggregate productivity is still relatively low. Although there are numerous determinants of aggregate productivity, it is largely based on the underlying productivity of all firms in the economy. Using firm-level data from several waves of the World Bank Enterprise Survey and Chile's National Manufacturing Survey, we explore the ‘what’ question on productivity dispersion in LAC. We document three stylized facts: (i) there are significant differences in firm productivity within industries – the firm at the 90th percentile of the productivity distribution produces almost seven times as much output (using the same measured inputs) as the 10th percentile firm; (ii) productivity differences persist over time – regressing a firm's current productivity on its one-year lagged productivity yields an autoregressive coefficient of around 0.9; and (iii) most of the growth in aggregate productivity comes from improvements in the productivity of existing firms.
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