Publication | Open Access
Production Function Estimation in Stata using Inputs to Control for Unobservables
457
Citations
0
References
2004
Year
Parameter EstimationEngineeringApplied EconomicsEconomic GrowthUnobservable Productivity ShocksInput-output AnalysisState EstimationProductivityEconomic AnalysisSystems EngineeringEstimation TheoryStatisticsQuantitative ManagementEconomicsEconometric MethodStata CommandFinanceProductivity ShocksEconometric ModelEconomic PolicyMacroeconomicsShock (Economics)Process ControlEconometricsBusinessStatistical InferenceProduction ForecastingProduction Function Estimation
A key issue in the estimation of production functions is the correlation between unobservable productivity shocks and input levels. Profit-maximizing firms respond to positive productivity shocks by expanding output, which requires additional inputs. Negative shocks lead firms to pare back output, decreasing their input usage. Olley and Pakes (1996) develop an estimator that uses investment as a proxy for these unobservable shocks. More recently, Levinsohn and Petrin (2003a) introduce an estimator that uses intermediate inputs as proxies, arguing that intermediates may respond more smoothly to productivity shocks. This paper reviews Levinsohn and Petrin's approach and introduces a Stata command that implements it.