Abstract
In the U.S. manufacturing sector, the entry margin is strongly procyclical, whereas the exit margin is acyclical. This study attempts to explain the entry-exit margin asymmetry. It introduces imperfect information in an industry equilibrium model and finds that potential entrants cannot disentangle aggregate productivity from their own productivity, inducing a signal extraction problem. With imperfect information on the aggregate productivity, potential entrants underestimate variations in equilibrium factor prices and overestimate variations in the value of entering. This amplified entry margin, combined with a reasonable amount of general equilibrium forces, mute cyclical variations in the exit margin. With the proposed mechanism, the model economy generates 28% of the observed variations in the entrants’ productivity. Notably, several testable implications of the model economy are consistent with the properties of the U.S. data.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have