Who Creates Jobs? Estimating Job Creation Rates at the Firm Level
Author(s) -
Peter Huber,
Harald Oberhofer,
Michael Pfaffermayr
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
ssrn electronic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1556-5068
DOI - 10.2139/ssrn.2138765
Subject(s) - estimator , econometrics , estimation , job creation , economics , econometric model , random effects model , point estimation , point (geometry) , population , statistics , mathematics , labour economics , meta analysis , medicine , geometry , management , demography , sociology
This paper analyzes econometric models of the Davis, Haltiwanger and Schuh (1996) job creation rate. In line with the most recent job creation literature, we focus on employment-weighted OLS estimation. Our main theoretical result reveals that employment-weighted OLS estimation of DHS job creation rate models provides biased marginal effects estimates. The reason for this is that by definition, the error terms for entering and exiting firms are non-stochastic and non-zero. This violates the crucial mean independence assumption requiring that the conditional expectation of the errors is zero for all firms. Consequently, we argue that firm entries and exits should be analyzed with separate econometric models and propose alternative maximum likelihood estimators which are easy to implement. A small-scale Monte Carlo analysis and an empirical exercise using the population of Austrian firms point to the relevance of our analytical findings.
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