Large Firm Dynamics and the Business Cycle

Thursday 4th April 2019
American Economic Review
Carvalho, V. M. and Grassi, B.
Do large firm dynamics drive the business cycle? We answer this question by developing a quantitative theory of aggregate fluctuations caused by firm-level disturbances alone. We show that a standard heterogeneous firm dynamics setup already contains in it a theory of the business cycle, without appealing to aggregate shocks. We offer an analytical characterization of the law of motion of the aggregate state in this class of models, the firm size distribution, and show that aggregate output and productivity dynamics display: (i) persistence, (ii) volatility, and (iii) time-varying second moments. We explore the key role of moments of the firm size distribution, and, in particular, the role of large firm dynamics, in shaping aggregate fluctuations, theoretically, quantitatively, and in the data.
Keywords
Large Firm Dynamics
Firm Size Distribution
Random Growth
Aggregate Fluctuations
D21
D22
D24
E32
L11
Themes
transmission