This article investigates the microeconomics of employment dynamics, using a Chinese manufacturing firm-level data set over the period 1998-2007. It does so in the light of a scheme of "circular and cumulative causation," whereby firms' heterogeneous productivity gains, sales dynamics and innovation activities ultimately shape the patterns of employment dynamics. Using firm's productivity growth as a proxy for process innovation, our results show that the latter correlates negatively with firm-level employment growth. Conversely, relative productivity levels, as such a general proxy for the broad technological advantages/disadvantages of each firm, do show positive effect on employment growth in the long-run through replicator-type dynamics. Moreover, firm-level demand dynamics play a significant role in driving employment growth, which more than compensate the labor-saving effect due to technological progress. Finally, and somewhat puzzlingly, the direct effects of product innovation and patenting activities on employment growth appear to be negligible.

Dosi, G., Yu, X., Technological catching-up, sales dynamics, and employment growth: Evidence from China's manufacturing, <<INDUSTRIAL AND CORPORATE CHANGE>>, 2010; 28 (1): 79-107. [doi:10.1093/icc/dty023] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/205399]

Technological catching-up, sales dynamics, and employment growth: Evidence from China's manufacturing

Yu, X.
Co-primo
2019

Abstract

This article investigates the microeconomics of employment dynamics, using a Chinese manufacturing firm-level data set over the period 1998-2007. It does so in the light of a scheme of "circular and cumulative causation," whereby firms' heterogeneous productivity gains, sales dynamics and innovation activities ultimately shape the patterns of employment dynamics. Using firm's productivity growth as a proxy for process innovation, our results show that the latter correlates negatively with firm-level employment growth. Conversely, relative productivity levels, as such a general proxy for the broad technological advantages/disadvantages of each firm, do show positive effect on employment growth in the long-run through replicator-type dynamics. Moreover, firm-level demand dynamics play a significant role in driving employment growth, which more than compensate the labor-saving effect due to technological progress. Finally, and somewhat puzzlingly, the direct effects of product innovation and patenting activities on employment growth appear to be negligible.
2019
Inglese
Dosi, G., Yu, X., Technological catching-up, sales dynamics, and employment growth: Evidence from China's manufacturing, <<INDUSTRIAL AND CORPORATE CHANGE>>, 2010; 28 (1): 79-107. [doi:10.1093/icc/dty023] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/205399]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/205399
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