Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
975982 Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications 2013 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Distribution and mobility of 500 firms in three typical economies are presented.•The inequality among Chinese top firms is the most significant.•Revenue/rank/share clock plots can visualize fluctuations of firm size.•Revenue/rank/share mobility index can reveal historical economic status.•Where there is a share mobility spike, there is an ailing economy in share mobility.

This paper considers the macroscopic and microscopic statistical features of the top 500 firms in China, the United States and the world, denoted as China 500 (CH500), Fortune 500 (US500) and Fortune Global 500 (FG500). From a macroscopic perspective, the firm size distribution of each category, when measured by revenue, is steadily distributed over the observed period, even during periods of financial crises. As is evidenced by the Gini coefficient, divergences between firm scales are most significant for the CH500. From a microscopic perspective, the underlying micro-dynamics are volatile and often turbulent due to the exit and entry of firms as well as shifts in their revenues and ranks. Such fluctuations, or mobility, are visualized in rank/revenue/share clocks. We also propose a revenue/rank/share mobility index that is a quantitative measurement of mobility. Among these, we find that the share mobility acts as an effective indicator of economic status; where there is a share mobility spike, there is an ailing economy. The share mobility indexes indicate that the 2008 Financial Crisis had little impact on the Chinese economy, while it triggered violent changes in the top 500 firms in the United States and the world.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Mathematical Physics
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