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Book ChapterDOI

Selection and Evolution of Industry

TLDR
The evolution of industry depends on the selection mechanism, that is, the process of entry and exit of firms and the various factors influencing the entry/exit decisions as discussed by the authors, and three major factors are most important in the selection process, which emphasizes the firm's ability and competence to alter their market position and hence through strong increasing returns to scale, to alter the market structure significantly.
Abstract
The evolution of industry depends on the selection mechanism, that is, the process of entry and exit of firms and the various factors influencing the entry and exit decisions. Three major factors are most important in the selection process. One is the evolutionary perspective which emphasizes the firm’s ability and competence to alter their market position and hence through strong increasing returns to scale, to alter the market structure significantly. Following the Schumpeterian theory of technological innovations the main source of such increasing returns is the cumulative aspect of innovations, where “size begets size” causes industrial dynamics to be characterized by nonlinear and path dependent processes, where random events like a new technical process may have lasting and irreversible effects on the dynamic evolution of the selection process. Secondly, firms differ significantly in their commitment and ability to innovate. Thus innovations in products and processes are largely endogenous to the firm through R&D investment and learning-by-doing. Thus vigorous innovation has been found to generate more competitive market structures, while innovations requiring large investment generally involve more concentration through large size firms. Also due to the cumulative nature of technological innovations firms that discover new technologies are able to maintain their lead even after the particular technology is obsolete.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Knowledge Spillover Theory of Entrepreneurship

TL;DR: This article developed a knowledge spillover theory of entrepreneurship, which argued that knowledge created endogenously results in knowledge spillovers, which allow entrepreneurs to identify and exploit opportunities, and then use this knowledge to increase economic growth.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Evolution of the Firm Size Distribution: Facts and Theory

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a comprehensive data set of Portuguese manufacturing firms and showed that the firm size distribution is significantly right-skewed, evolving over time toward a lognormal distribution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Finance as a Barrier to Entry: Bank Competition and Industry Structure in Local U.S. Markets

TL;DR: In this article, the authors test how competition in local U.S. banking markets affects the market structure of non-financial sectors and find that in markets with concentrated banking, potential entrants face greater difficulty gaining access to credit than in markets in which banking is more competitive.
Journal ArticleDOI

Entrepreneurship and the process of firms’ entry, survival and growth

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the microeconomic entrepreneurial foundations of industrial dynamics (entry and exit) and characterise the founder's ex-ante features in terms of likely ex-post business performance, concluding that entry of new firms is heterogeneous with innovative entrepreneurs being found together with passive followers, over-optimist gamblers and even escapees from unemployment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Entrepreneurship, Agglomeration and Technological Change

Abstract: Technological change is a central element in macroeconomic growth explanation. Endogenous growth models take a revolutionary step towards better understanding the economic growth process by deriving technological change from profit-motivated individual behavior. In endogenous growth theory knowledge spillovers play a fundamental role in the determination of the rate of technological progress. As such the efficiency of transmitting knowledge into economic applications is a crucial factor in explaining macroeconomic growth. Endogenous growth models take this factor exogenous. We argue that variations across countries in entrepreneurship and the spatial structure of economic activities could potentially be the source of different efficiencies in knowledge spillovers and ultimately in economic growth. We develop an empirical model to test both the entrepreneurship and the geography effects on knowledge spillovers. To date the only international data that are collected on the basis of exactly the same principles in each country are the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) data. We use the 2001 GEM cross-country data to measure the level of entrepreneurship in each particular economy. For this purpose we apply the TEA index developed within the framework of the GEM project and calculated for each country participating in this international research. Additionally, data on employment, production, patent applications, public and private R&D expenditures originating from different international and national sources are applied in the paper.
References
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Book

Investment Under Uncertainty

TL;DR: In this article, Dixit and Pindyck provide the first detailed exposition of a new theoretical approach to the capital investment decisions of firms, stressing the irreversibility of most investment decisions, and the ongoing uncertainty of the economic environment in which these decisions are made.
Journal ArticleDOI

Technical change and the aggregate production function

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a method to improve the performance of the system by using the information of the user's interaction with the system and the system itself, including the interaction between the two parties.
Book

Selection and the evolution of industry

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a theory of selection with incomplete information that is consistent with these and other findings, and give rise to entry, growth, and exit behavior that agrees, broadly, with the evidence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Barriers to New Competition

Henry W. Broude, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1957 - 
Book

Barriers to new competition

Joe S. Bain
TL;DR: In this paper, a series of hypotheses as to the conditions of entry, and the probable degree to which they serve as barriers to new competition are presented, and a bold attempt is made to measure the height of these barriers in 20 manufacturing industries.
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