Swimming Upstream: Input-output Linkages and the Direction of Product Adoption
Published By: London School of Economics and Political Science | Published Date: February, 01 , 2016Multiproduct firms dominate production, and their product turnover contributes substantially to aggregate growth. Firms continually adapt their product mix, but what determines which products firms expand into? Theories of the firm propose that mulitproduct firms choose to
make products which need the same know-how or inputs that can't be bought ‘off the shelf’. We empirically examine this rationale by testing for firm-level capabilities that are shared across products and manifested through input-output (IO) linkages. We show that a firm's idiosyncratic
horizontal and vertical similarity to a product's IO structure predicts product adoption. Using product-specific policy changes for a firm's inputs and outputs, we show that input linkages are the most important, suggesting that firms' product capabilities depend more on economies of
scope rather than product market complementarities.
Author(s): Johannes Boehm, Swati Dhingra, John Morrow | Posted on: Mar 09, 2016 | Views()