Publication | Closed Access
Intra-Industry Heterogeneity and the Great Depression: The American Motor Vehicles Industry, 1929–1935
141
Citations
8
References
1991
Year
IndustrialisationEconomic FluctuationEconomic HistoryEconomic GrowthIndustrial OrganizationProductivityIndustry StudiesEconomic AnalysisIntra-industry HeterogeneityEconomicsIndustrial BehaviorInteresting PatternsIndustrial RevolutionGreat DepressionBusiness HistoryMacroeconomicsIndustrial DevelopmentBusinessLabor Market ImpactEconomic Change
Reliance on a “representative firm” approach in studying industrial behavior during the Great Depression obscures economically interesting patterns. A newly discovered data source lets us form and study an establishment-level panel dataset on the motor vehicles industry, one of the largest in 1929. Substantial intraindustry heterogeneity led to large composition effects in employment, output, and productivity: the large number of plants that shut down were unlike the continuing ones. Oddly, output does not seem to have shifted among continuing producers to the relatively low-cost ones. Reconciling these should illuminate links between industrial organization and macroeconomics.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1