On the robustness of the fat-tailed distribution of firm growth rates: a global sensitivity analysis

被引:0
|
作者
G. Dosi
M. C. Pereira
M. E. Virgillito
机构
[1] Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna,Institute of Economics
[2] University of Campinas,Institute of Economics
[3] Istituto di Politica Economica,undefined
[4] Universita’ Cattolica del Sacro Cuore,undefined
关键词
Fat-tailed distributions; Kriging meta-modeling; Near-orthogonal latin hypercubes; Variance-based sensitivity analysis; ABMs validation; C15; C63; D21; D83; L25;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Firms grow and decline by relatively lumpy jumps which cannot be accounted by the cumulation of small, “atom-less”, independent shocks. Rather “big” episodes of expansion and contraction are relatively frequent. More technically, this is revealed by the fat-tailed distributions of growth rates. This applies across different levels of sectoral disaggregation, across countries, over different historical periods for which there are available data. What determines such property? In Dosi et al. (The footprint of evolutionary processes of learning and selection upon the statistical properties of industrial dynamics. Industrial and corporate change. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2016) we implemented a simple multi-firm evolutionary simulation model, built upon the coupling of a replicator dynamic and an idiosyncratic learning process, which turns out to be able to robustly reproduce such a stylized fact. Here, we investigate, by means of a Kriging meta-model, how robust such “ubiquitousness” feature is with regard to a global exploration of the parameters space. The exercise confirms the high level of generality of the results in a statistically robust global sensitivity analysis framework.
引用
收藏
页码:173 / 193
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Growth and carcass characteristics of crossbred progeny frorn lean-tailed and fat-tailed sheep breeds
    Khaldari, M.
    Kashan, N. E. J.
    Afzalzadeh, A.
    Salehi, A.
    SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE, 2007, 37 (01) : 51 - 56
  • [22] A Locally Both Leptokurtic and Fat-Tailed Distribution with Application in a Bayesian Stochastic Volatility Model
    Lenart, Lukasz
    Pajor, Anna
    Kwiatkowski, Lukasz
    ENTROPY, 2021, 23 (06)
  • [23] Social influences on dispersal and the fat-tailed dispersal distribution in red-cockaded woodpeckers
    Kesler, Dylan C.
    Walters, Jeffrey R.
    Kappes, John J., Jr.
    BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY, 2010, 21 (06) : 1337 - 1343
  • [24] Correlation and relaxation times for a stochastic process with a fat-tailed steady-state distribution
    Liu, Z.
    Serota, R. A.
    PHYSICA A-STATISTICAL MECHANICS AND ITS APPLICATIONS, 2017, 474 : 301 - 311
  • [25] Fat-tailed distribution derived from the first eigenvector of a symmetric random sparse matrix
    Takahashi, Hisanao
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICS A-MATHEMATICAL AND THEORETICAL, 2014, 47 (06)
  • [26] The effect of change in mass distribution due to defensive posture on gait in fat-tailed scorpions
    Telheiro, Ana
    Coelho, Pedro
    van der Meijden, Arie
    JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY A-NEUROETHOLOGY SENSORY NEURAL AND BEHAVIORAL PHYSIOLOGY, 2021, 207 (02): : 117 - 125
  • [27] Breeding practices, growth, and carcass potential of fat-tailed Washera sheep breed in Ethiopia
    Getachew, Tesfaye
    Gizaw, Solomon
    Lemma, Sisay
    Taye, Mengistie
    TROPICAL ANIMAL HEALTH AND PRODUCTION, 2011, 43 (07) : 1443 - 1448
  • [28] Polymorphism and Comparative Expression Analysis of THRSP Gene in Fat-Tailed and Thin-Tailed Sheep Breeds
    Sun, Q.
    Liu, Q.
    Di, R.
    Wang, Y.
    Gan, S.
    Liu, S.
    Wang, X.
    Hu, W.
    Cao, X.
    Pan, Zh
    Guo, X.
    Yang, Y.
    Rushdi, H. E.
    Chu, M.
    PAKISTAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY, 2021, 53 (02) : 545 - 553
  • [29] Bayesian factor analysis with fat-tailed factors and its exact marginal likelihood
    Ando, Tomohiro
    JOURNAL OF MULTIVARIATE ANALYSIS, 2009, 100 (08) : 1717 - 1726
  • [30] Explaining the distribution of firm growth rates
    Bottazzi, Giulio
    Secchi, Angelo
    RAND JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, 2006, 37 (02): : 235 - 256