Subsidies, Shadow of Death and Productivity

Our panel data from over 10,000 Finnish firms during the years 2003-2010 sheds light on the effect of different business subsidies on firm productivity performance and on the relationship between firms’ lagged labor productivity and market exit. We find that not any of the subsidy types have statistically significant short-term or longer term impacts on the firms’ productivity performance. It seems that particularly employment and investment subsidies tend to be allocated to the relatively less efficient companies. We further observe that a decline in the firm’s lagged labor productivity levels are clearly more weakly related to the subsidized firms’ exit than to the exit of firms that have not received any subsidies. Our empirical findings thus hint that the allocation of subsidies to the relatively inefficient firms increases their liquidity making their market exit less likely than it would be otherwise. In other words, our data indicate that subsidy allocation weakens the shadow of death phenomenon observed in the previous empirical studies and hinders the process of creative destruction in the economy.

Information om publikationen

Serie
ETLA Working Papers 16
Datum
05.08.2013
Nyckelord
productivity, business subsidies, firm exit, enterprise policy, technology policy
ISSN
2323-2420, 2323-2439
JEL
D24, J23, L10, L53, O25
Sidor
28
Pris
15 €
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Språk
Engelska