Unobserved heterogeneity in the productivity distribution and the gains from trade

Finding a good parametric approximation to the productivity distribution is a problem of general interest. This paper argues that heterogeneity in productivity is best captured by finite mixture models (FMMs). FMMs build on the existence of unobserved subpopulations in the data. As such, they are ge...

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Hauptverfasser: Dewitte, Ruben, Dumont, Michel, Rayp, Glenn, Willemé, Peter
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Dumont, Michel
Rayp, Glenn
Willemé, Peter
description Finding a good parametric approximation to the productivity distribution is a problem of general interest. This paper argues that heterogeneity in productivity is best captured by finite mixture models (FMMs). FMMs build on the existence of unobserved subpopulations in the data. As such, they are generally consistent with models of firm dynamics differing between groups of firms and allow for a very flexible distribution fit. Relative to commonly used parametric alternatives, we find that FMMs are the only distributions able to provide a sufficiently good fit to the data. A gains from trade exercise with Portuguese data reveals that only FMMs approximate the "true" gains reasonably well.
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source Ghent University Academic Bibliography; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete
subjects Business and Economics
Finite mixture model
firm size distribution
gains from trade
productivity distribution
title Unobserved heterogeneity in the productivity distribution and the gains from trade
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