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Innovation, Technological Conditions and New Firm Survival
High neonatal mortality is one of the most salient ‘facts’ about firm performance in the industrial organisation literature. We model firm survival and examine the relative influence of firm, industry and macroeconomic factors on survival for new vis‐à‐vis incumbent firms in Australia. In particular...
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Published in: | The Economic record 2008-12, Vol.84 (267), p.434-448 |
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container_title | The Economic record |
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creator | JENSEN, PAUL H. WEBSTER, ELIZABETH BUDDELMEYER, HIELKE |
description | High neonatal mortality is one of the most salient ‘facts’ about firm performance in the industrial organisation literature. We model firm survival and examine the relative influence of firm, industry and macroeconomic factors on survival for new vis‐à‐vis incumbent firms in Australia. In particular, we focus on how the intensity of innovation in each industry relates to firm survival. Our results imply that while new firms thrive in risky and innovative industries, they are also more susceptible to business cycle effects such as changes in the rate of growth of industry profits and the availability of equity finance. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1111/j.1475-4932.2008.00509.x |
format | article |
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source | EBSCOhost Business Source Ultimate; International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection; EBSCO_EconLit with Full Text(美国经济学会全文数据库) |
subjects | Australia Business cycles C41 Comparative studies Enterprises Industrial organization Innovation Innovations L10 O31 Risk Startups Survival Technological change |
title | Innovation, Technological Conditions and New Firm Survival |
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