Title of article
Rates of profit as correlated sums of random variables
Author/Authors
Greenblatt، نويسنده , , R.E.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
13
From page
5006
To page
5018
Abstract
Profit realization is the dominant feature of market-based economic systems, determining their dynamics to a large extent. Rather than attaining an equilibrium, profit rates vary widely across firms, and the variation persists over time. Differing definitions of profit result in differing empirical distributions. To study the statistical properties of profit rates, I used data from a publicly available database for the US Economy for 2009–2010 (Risk Management Association). For each of three profit rate measures, the sample space consists of 771 points. Each point represents aggregate data from a small number of US manufacturing firms of similar size and type (NAICS code of principal product). When comparing the empirical distributions of profit rates, significant ‘heavy tails’ were observed, corresponding principally to a number of firms with larger profit rates than would be expected from simple models. An apparently novel correlated sum of random variables statistical model was used to model the data. In the case of operating and net profit rates, a number of firms show negative profits (losses), ruling out simple gamma or lognormal distributions as complete models for these data.
Keywords
Profit , Distribution , Correlated sum of random variables , Manufacturing , Stochastic , Econophysics
Journal title
Physica A Statistical Mechanics and its Applications
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Physica A Statistical Mechanics and its Applications
Record number
1737373
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