← Search

Varying Heterogeneity among U.S. Firms: Facts and Implications

Hyunbae Chun1; Jung‐Wook Kim2; Randall Mørck

1 Sogang University · 2 Seoul National University

The Review of Economics and Statistics 2011

U.S. firms' stock return volatility rose fivefold from 1971 through 2000 and then reverted to near 1971 levels by 2006. This was driven mainly by a rise and fall in the firm-specific, rather than systematic, component of volatility. Firm-level total factor productivity growth volatility exhibited a similar pattern. We hypothesize that firm heterogeneity, reflected in firm-specific volatility, rises as a new general purpose technology (GPT) propagates across the economy and then ebbs once the GPT is widespread. Measuring GPT adoption by information technology capital intensity, we find robust cross-industry empirical evidence supporting the hypothesis.

DOI
10.1162/rest_a_00099
Volume
93 (3)
Pages
1034-1052
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
openalex crossref