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The Effects of Irreversibility and Uncertainty on Capital Accumulation

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TLDR
In this article, the authors show that an increase in uncertainty can either increase or decrease the expected long-run capital stock under irreversibility relative to that under reversibility, and that a firm with irreversible investment may have a higher or a lower expected capital stock, even in the long run, compared to an otherwise identical firm with reversible investment.
Abstract
When investment decisions cannot be reversed and returns to capital are uncertain, the firm faces a higher user cost of capital than if it could reverse its decisions. This higher user cost tends to reduce the firm's capital stock. Opposing this effect is the irreversibility constraint itself: when the constraint binds, the firm would like to sell capital but cannot. This effect tends to increase the firm's capital stock. We show that a firm with irreversible investment may have a higher or a lower expected capital stock, even in the long run, compared to an otherwise identical firm with reversible investment. Furthermore, an increase in uncertainty can either increase or decrease the expected long-run capital stock under irreversibility relative to that under reversibility. However, changes in the expected growth rate of demand, the interest rate, the capital share in output, and the price elasticity of demand all have unambiguous effects.

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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.
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Capital Theory and Investment Behavior

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Journal ArticleDOI

Entry and Exit Decisions under Uncertainty

TL;DR: In this paper, a firm's entry and exit decisions when the output price follows a random walk are examined, where an idle firm and an active firm are viewed as assets that are call options on each other.
Journal ArticleDOI

Firing Costs and Labour Demand: How Bad is Eurosclerosis?

TL;DR: In this paper, a model of firms' optimal employment policies under linear adjustment costs is proposed, and it is shown that firing costs have a larger effect on firms' propensity to fire than to hire, and (slightly) increase average long run employment.
Book

Brownian motion and stochastic flow systems

TL;DR: Brownian Motion as discussed by the authors : Brownian Motion is a model of buffered flow, and it can be used to control flow system performance, as shown in Fig. 1 : Optimal Control of Brownain Motion.
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