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Recent empirical work indicates that job creation and destruction rates are large, implying significant amounts of job reallocation across firms. This paper builds a general equilibrium model of this reallocation process, calibrates it using data on firm-level dynamics, and evaluates the aggregate implications of policies that interfere with this process. We find that a tax on job destruction at the firm level has a sizable negative impact on total employment: a tax equal to 1 year's wages reduces employment by roughly 2.5 percent. More striking, however, are the welfare consequences: the cost in terms of consumption of this same tax is greater than 2 percent. Copyright 1993 by University of Chicago Press.
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Hugo A. Hopenhayn
University of California, Los Angeles
Richard Rogerson
National Bureau of Economic Research
Journal of Political Economy
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Hopenhayn et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dc69064264bdb384359358 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1086/261909