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New estimates for West Germany indicate overall productivity differentials of 20-30 percent in favor of firms practicing profit sharing. These compare with estimates of 3-8 percent for comparable British firms reported in a recent issue. Like the U.K. results, they reveal important interactions...
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The authors analyze the differences between the behavior of private firms and that of producer cooperatives in a matched sample of the two organizational types from the regions of Emilia Romagna and Toscana in North-Central Italy, where producer cooperatives are numerous. Individual firm-level...
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'Persistence of profits' studies of competitiveness across samples of firms, and for individual firms, have almost always employed a simple first order autoregression model. Reservations over the use and interpretation of the AR1 in this context raise questions both over the reliability of...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005632720
This paper reports productivity differentials of 3-8 percent in favor of profit-sharing firms in the U.K. engineering industry. The estimates come from equations in which profit sharing interacts with factor input levels and the firms' technological, organizational, and labor-force...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005232400
We review the logic and implications underlying both static and dynamic models of competition, and associated tests of competitive effectiveness. Complications arising due to innovation, mergers and cyclical factors are discussed. Points raised in the theoretical discussion are illustrated with...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005471691
We present a trend-based alternative to the standard first-order autoregression model in persistence of profits studies. This is motivated by reservations over the interpretation of the standard model, and rests on a different concept of dynamic competition. A nine-category taxonomy of long-run...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005437918