Age, Size, Growth and Survival: UK Companies in the 1980s
- 1 June 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Journal of Industrial Economics
- Vol. 42 (2) , 115-140
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2950485
Abstract
This paper examines growth and survival amongst quoted and unquoted UK companies in the period 1975-85 and compares the results with earlier UK and US studies. An examination of death rates shows that smaller companies had higher death rates but the largest and smallest companies were least vulnerable to takeover. Careful attention is therefore paid to problems of sample selection bias. It is shown that smaller companies grew faster than larger companies, that Gibrat's Law does not hold amongst smaller firms, that age is negatively related to growth, and that these results are not an artefact of sample selection bias.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tests of Alternative Theories of Firm GrowthJournal of Political Economy, 1987
- The Relationship Between Firm Size and Firm Growth in the US Manufacturing SectorJournal of Industrial Economics, 1987