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A transactional theory of fluctuations in company size

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  • A. O. Schweiger
  • S. V. Buldyrev
  • H. E. Stanley

Abstract

Detailed empirical studies of publicly traded business firms have established that the standard deviation of annual sales growth rates decreases with increasing firm sales as a power law, and that the sales growth distribution is non-Gaussian with slowly decaying tails. To explain these empirical facts, a theory is developed that incorporates both the fluctuations of a single firm's sales and the statistical differences among many firms. The theory reproduces both the scaling in the standard deviation and the non-Gaussian distribution of growth rates. Earlier models reproduce the same empirical features by splitting firms into somewhat ambiguous subunits; by decomposing total sales into individual transactions, this ambiguity is removed. The theory yields verifiable predictions and accommodates any form of business organization within a firm. Furthermore, because transactions are fundamental to economic activity at all scales, the theory can be extended to all levels of the economy, from individual products to multinational corporations.

Suggested Citation

  • A. O. Schweiger & S. V. Buldyrev & H. E. Stanley, 2007. "A transactional theory of fluctuations in company size," Papers physics/0703023, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:physics/0703023
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    File URL: http://arxiv.org/pdf/physics/0703023
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    Cited by:

    1. Hernan Mondani & Petter Holme & Fredrik Liljeros, 2014. "Fat-Tailed Fluctuations in the Size of Organizations: The Role of Social Influence," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 9(7), pages 1-9, July.

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