The relationship between robots and labour productivity: Does business scale matter?

Scholarly literature on the economic consequences of robotisation at the microeconomic level often does not take into account the pronounced digital gap between small and medium-sized businesses and large ones. In this regard, theoretical and real estimates may differ for companies of different size...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Daria A. Starovatova
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Ural State University of Economics 2023-04-01
Series:Journal of New Economy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jne.usue.ru/en/issues-2023/1273
_version_ 1797848061225992192
author Daria A. Starovatova
author_facet Daria A. Starovatova
author_sort Daria A. Starovatova
collection DOAJ
description Scholarly literature on the economic consequences of robotisation at the microeconomic level often does not take into account the pronounced digital gap between small and medium-sized businesses and large ones. In this regard, theoretical and real estimates may differ for companies of different sizes. The article studies the relationship between robotisation and labour productivity in the Russian industry in the context of size groups of companies. Methodologically, the study relies on the theory of the firm and economic theories explaining the essence of labour productivity and methods for evaluating it. The research analyses the data about 725 Russian industrial enterprises for 2017 using the methods of regression modeling. The data was obtained in the course of the fundamental research programme at the HSE University. According to the results, only small and medium-sized enterprises have a significant and reliable relationship between the introduction of robots and labour productivity. Probably due to the complexity of business processes, large businesses need deeper and more elaborate robotisation to gain labour productivity benefits. The calculations also demonstrate a negative relationship between exports and labour productivity in large companies, which contradicts the ‘classical’ ideas about the impact of export activities on the efficiency indicators. This may indicate that the high labour productivity of a considerable part of large Russian enterprises proceeds from their monopoly position in domestic markets, while formally less productive companies, which do not occupy dominant positions, appear to be competitive and motivated enough to enter foreign markets. The findings can be useful for the leadership of enterprises, especially that of SMEs, for the managerial decision-making in terms of increasing productivity, in particular, through robotisation of production.
first_indexed 2024-04-09T18:21:17Z
format Article
id doaj.art-b5f5bdf7b08e4b8aa2073575121d5e7e
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2658-5081
2687-0002
language Russian
last_indexed 2024-04-09T18:21:17Z
publishDate 2023-04-01
publisher Ural State University of Economics
record_format Article
series Journal of New Economy
spelling doaj.art-b5f5bdf7b08e4b8aa2073575121d5e7e2023-04-12T07:47:28ZrusUral State University of EconomicsJournal of New Economy2658-50812687-00022023-04-012418110310.29141/2658-5081-2023-24-1-4The relationship between robots and labour productivity: Does business scale matter?Daria A. Starovatova0HSE University, Saint Petersburg, RussiaScholarly literature on the economic consequences of robotisation at the microeconomic level often does not take into account the pronounced digital gap between small and medium-sized businesses and large ones. In this regard, theoretical and real estimates may differ for companies of different sizes. The article studies the relationship between robotisation and labour productivity in the Russian industry in the context of size groups of companies. Methodologically, the study relies on the theory of the firm and economic theories explaining the essence of labour productivity and methods for evaluating it. The research analyses the data about 725 Russian industrial enterprises for 2017 using the methods of regression modeling. The data was obtained in the course of the fundamental research programme at the HSE University. According to the results, only small and medium-sized enterprises have a significant and reliable relationship between the introduction of robots and labour productivity. Probably due to the complexity of business processes, large businesses need deeper and more elaborate robotisation to gain labour productivity benefits. The calculations also demonstrate a negative relationship between exports and labour productivity in large companies, which contradicts the ‘classical’ ideas about the impact of export activities on the efficiency indicators. This may indicate that the high labour productivity of a considerable part of large Russian enterprises proceeds from their monopoly position in domestic markets, while formally less productive companies, which do not occupy dominant positions, appear to be competitive and motivated enough to enter foreign markets. The findings can be useful for the leadership of enterprises, especially that of SMEs, for the managerial decision-making in terms of increasing productivity, in particular, through robotisation of production.https://jne.usue.ru/en/issues-2023/1273labour productivitygrowth driversroboticsautomationdigital gaprobotisation of production
spellingShingle Daria A. Starovatova
The relationship between robots and labour productivity: Does business scale matter?
Journal of New Economy
labour productivity
growth drivers
robotics
automation
digital gap
robotisation of production
title The relationship between robots and labour productivity: Does business scale matter?
title_full The relationship between robots and labour productivity: Does business scale matter?
title_fullStr The relationship between robots and labour productivity: Does business scale matter?
title_full_unstemmed The relationship between robots and labour productivity: Does business scale matter?
title_short The relationship between robots and labour productivity: Does business scale matter?
title_sort relationship between robots and labour productivity does business scale matter
topic labour productivity
growth drivers
robotics
automation
digital gap
robotisation of production
url https://jne.usue.ru/en/issues-2023/1273
work_keys_str_mv AT dariaastarovatova therelationshipbetweenrobotsandlabourproductivitydoesbusinessscalematter
AT dariaastarovatova relationshipbetweenrobotsandlabourproductivitydoesbusinessscalematter