Developments at aggregated industries levels can mask heterogeneity in productivity among firms within the same industry. For instance, it may be interesting to look at the contribution of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). In several countries, a considerable number of low-productivity firms (many of them small firms) coexists with large firms that are highly productive and exposed to international competition. Productivity tends to increase with firm size, as large firms can benefit from increasing returns to scale. Firm-level productivity also depends on the industry enterprises are operating in. In addition, large firms tend to adopt new technologies more than small firms, unless the latter are new or younger companies.
While new small firms can also spur aggregate productivity growth when they exploit new technologies and stimulate productivity-enhancing changes by incumbents, severe economic downturns can lead to a missing generation of start-ups (OECD, 2023[1]). This has usually marginal effects in the short term, but the absence of these start-ups may affect long-term productivity, as they play a key role in competition, innovation (Kolev et al., 2022[2]) and job creation (Criscuolo, Gal and Menon, 2016[3])
Scale-up dynamics could also impact firms’ productivity. Firms that scale up in employment tend to be more productive as they enter their high-growth phase and then catch up with their peers as they grow. While firms that scale up in turnover tend to expand their workforce in the year before scaling (leading to a drop in productivity), their employment grows more slowly on average during the subsequent period of high turnover growth, making them more productive than comparable non-scalers (OECD, 2021[4]). Finally, human capital (e.g., workforce skills, management skills) is another key factor that explains differences in productivity across firms (Criscuolo et al., 2021[5]).