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The Sources of Capital Misallocation
Author(s) -
Joel M. David,
Venky Venkateswaran
Publication year - 2017
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.3386/w23129
Subject(s) - capital (architecture) , economics , business , monetary economics , geography , archaeology
We study a model of investment in which both technological and informational frictions as well as institutional/policy distortions lead to capital misallocation, i.e., static marginal products are not equalized. We devise an empirical strategy to disentangle these forces using readily observable moments in firm-level data. Applying this methodology to manufacturing firms in China reveals that adjustment costs and uncertainty have significant aggregate consequences but account for only a modest share of the observed dispersion in the marginal product of capital. A substantial fraction of misallocation stems from firmspecific distortions, both productivity/size-dependent as well as permanent. For large US firms, adjustment costs are relatively more salient, though permanent firm-level factors remain important. These results are robust to the presence of liquidity/financial constraints.

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