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JournalISSN: 0889-938X

Review of Industrial Organization 

Springer Science+Business Media
About: Review of Industrial Organization is an academic journal published by Springer Science+Business Media. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Competition (economics) & Market power. It has an ISSN identifier of 0889-938X. Over the lifetime, 1555 publications have been published receiving 37263 citations. The journal is also known as: RIO.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper examined the efficiency and price effects of mergers by applying a frontier profit function to data on bank "megamergers" and found that merged banks experience a statistically significant 16 percentage point average increase in profit efficiency rank relative to other large banks.
Abstract: This paper examines the efficiency and price effects of mergers by applying a frontier profit function to data on bank ‘megamergers’. We find that merged banks experience a statistically significant 16 percentage point average increase in profit efficiency rank relative to other large banks. Most of the improvement is from increasing revenues, including a shift in outputs from securities to loans, a higher-valued product. Improvements were greatest for the banks with the lowest efficiencies prior to merging, who therefore had the greatest capacity for improvement. By comparison, the effects on profits from merger-related changes in prices were found to be very small.

670 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors link the propensity for innovative activity to spatially cluster to the stage of the industry life cycle and the theory of knowledge spillovers, based on the knowledge production function for innovative activities, suggests that geographic proximity matters the most where tacit knowledge plays an important role in the generation of innovative activity.
Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to link the propensity for innovative activity to spatially cluster to the stage of the industry life cycle. The theory of knowledge spillovers, based on the knowledge production function for innovative activity, suggests that geographic proximity matters the most where tacit knowledge plays an important role in the generation of innovative activity. According to the emerging literature of the industry life cycle, tacit knowledge plays the most important role during the early stages of the industry life cycle. Based on a data base that identifies innovative activity for individual states and specific industries for the United States, the empirical evidence suggests that the propensity for innovative activity is shaped by the stage of the industry life cycle. While the generation of new economic knowledge tends to result in a greater propensity for innovative activity to cluster during the early stages of the industry life cycle, innovative activity tends to be more highly dispersed during the mature and declining stages of the life cycle, particularly after controlling for the extent to which the location of production is geographically concentrated. This may suggest that the positive agglomeration effects during the early stages of the industry life cycle become replaced by congestion effects during the latter stages of the industry life cycle.

522 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the impacts that size and age of firms have on firm-level productivity and profitability, and found that older firms are more productive and less profitable, whereas the larger firms are, conversely, more profitable and less productive.
Abstract: Using contemporary data for an extensive sample of 1020 Indian firms, this paper investigates the impacts that size and age of firms have on firm-level productivity and profitability. In India older firms are found to be more productive and less profitable, whereas the larger firms are, conversely, found to be more profitable and less productive. These performance differences are explained as arising from the market-restricting industrial policies that have been followed in India over the past three decades.

484 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, over 70 empirical studies of entry and exit patterns covering eleven different countries generally support the expectation that entry is more frequent in more profitable, rapidly growing industries, and slower where the absolute costs of capital required to build a minimum efficient scale plant are imposing.
Abstract: Over 70 empirical studies of entry and exit patterns covering eleven different countries generally support the expectation that entry is more frequent in more profitable, rapidly growing industries, and slower where the absolute costs of capital required to build a minimum efficient scale plant are imposing. Scale economies, excess capacity, and limit pricing receive little empirical support as entry impediments. The evidence concerning the effects of advertising and R&D intensity is confusing. Exit is faster where profits are lower, and slower where durable specific (sunk) capital costs are more important. Exit and entry are strongly correlated, probably due to displacement (of incumbents by more efficient entrants) and vacuum effects (in which entrants are enticed by the prospects of selling to uncommitted customers abandoned by a recent exit).

389 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present evidence that import competition and foreign direct investment discourage entry and stimulate exit of domestic entrepreneurs in the Belgian manufacturing industry and suggest that this crowding out effect may be moderated or even reversed in the long-run due to the long term positive effects of FDI on domestic entrepreneurship as a result of learning, demonstration, networking and linkage effects between foreign and domestic firms.
Abstract: In analyzing firm entry and exit across Belgian manufacturing industries, this paper presents evidence that import competition and foreign direct investment discourage entry and stimulate exit of domestic entrepreneurs. These results are in line with theoretical occupational choice models that predict foreign direct investment would crowd out domestic entrepreneurs through their selections in product and labor markets. However, the empirical results also suggest that this crowding out effect may be moderated or even reversed in the long-run due to the long term positive effects of FDI on domestic entrepreneurship as a result of learning, demonstration, networking and linkage effects between foreign and domestic firms.

346 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202313
202245
202165
202069
201959
201855