ArXiv TLDR

The Rise of Negative Earnings and Demand Shifting Investment

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2605.02680

Jacob Toner Gosselin, Dalton Rongxuan Zhang

econ.GN

TLDR

This paper documents a secular rise in negative earnings among US firms, linking it to demand-shifting investment and a significant GDP decline.

Key contributions

  • Documents a secular rise in negative earnings and loss persistence among US firms (1980-2019).
  • Identifies a shift in firm spending from production/traditional investment to sales/admin expenses.
  • Proposes a model with demand-shifting investment and scale elasticity to explain these trends.
  • Model predicts a 9.1% GDP reduction due to labor/demand reallocation driven by increased scale elasticity.

Why it matters

This paper reveals a concerning trend of increasing negative earnings and its profound economic impact. It highlights how changes in firm investment strategies and demand dynamics can significantly reduce GDP and reallocate resources. Understanding these shifts is crucial for economic policy and business strategy.

Original Abstract

We document the rise of negative earnings between 1980 and 2019: a secular increase in the percent of firms reporting losses, both among public firms and in the broader universe of US corporations, and a secular increase in the persistence of losses year-to-year among public firms. This rise has occurred alongside a spreading of the sales and earnings distribution and a recomposition of firm spending away from production costs and traditional investment and towards sales general and administrative expenses. We rationalize these phenomena with a model of heterogenous firms engaging in supply and demand shifting investment. Our model includes a scale elasticity of demand determining the relationship between the intensive margin of demand (demand per customer) and the extensive margin of demand (number of customers). We are able to quantitatively match the rise in reported losses and qualitatively match (1) the increased persistence of losses, (2) the spreading of the sales and earning distribution and (3) the recomposition of firm spending with this parameter as the single driver of changes across steady state equilibria. The rise in the scale elasticity associated with the increase in reported losses has non-trivial aggregate implications: in our model it lowers GDP by -9.1% by reallocating labor away from goods and capital production and reallocating demand away from productive firms.

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