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Financing intermediate inputs and misallocation
by
Wang, Wenya
, Xu, Jing
in
Borrowing
/ Equilibrium
/ Manufacturing
/ Production functions
/ Productivity measurement
/ VAT
/ Working capital
2025
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Do you wish to request the book?
Financing intermediate inputs and misallocation
by
Wang, Wenya
, Xu, Jing
in
Borrowing
/ Equilibrium
/ Manufacturing
/ Production functions
/ Productivity measurement
/ VAT
/ Working capital
2025
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Journal Article
Financing intermediate inputs and misallocation
2025
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Overview
This paper examines the impact of financially constrained intermediate inputs on within-industry total factor productivity loss. Utilizing exogenous tax reforms in China as a natural experiment, our difference-in-difference analysis reveals that reduced tax burdens lead to increased firm-level intermediate inputs, particularly among financially constrained firms. We incorporate financially constrained intermediate inputs into a partial equilibrium model of firm dynamics. Our calibration suggests that financially constrained intermediate inputs play a quantitatively more important role in accounting for misallocation than financially constrained capital. The presence of financially constrained intermediate inputs introduces a downward bias in the measurement of value-added productivity, especially for firms in the top decile of gross-output productivity. As a result, the average “efficient” levels of capital and labor for the top decile firms in the standard Hsieh and Klenow (2009) exercise are lower than what is truly efficient.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Subject
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