Publication | Closed Access
Declining Business Dynamism: What We Know and the Way Forward
448
Citations
9
References
2016
Year
Productivity GrowthEndogenous Growth TheoryEntrepreneurshipU.s. EconomyEconomic GrowthIndustrial OrganizationProductivityManagementStrategic PlanningGross JobStructural ChangeEconomicsChange ManagementBusiness DynamismStrategyOrganizational TransformationStrategic ManagementLabor EconomicsBusiness GrowthMacroeconomicsBusinessBusiness StrategyGrowth TheoryLabor Market ImpactBusiness EconomicsFirm DynamicsUnemployment
A growing body of evidence indicates that the U.S. economy has become less dynamic in recent years. This trend is evident in declining rates of gross job and worker flows as well as declining rates of entrepreneurship and young firm activity, and the trend is pervasive across industries, regions, and firm size classes. We describe the evidence on these changes in the U.S. economy by reviewing existing research. We then describe new empirical facts about the relationship between establishment-level productivity and employment growth, framing our results in terms of canonical models of firm dynamics and suggesting empirically testable potential explanations.
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