A key public policy question regarding PE transactions is whether these deals improve economic performance. There is also growing concern regarding how ownership changes affect workers and innovation, since any performance gains may be due to measures undertaken by the new PE owners to reduce wages, lay off workers, and reduce investment in physical capital and research and development (R&D).
The push for greater regulation is partly based on results from the standard empirical approach to assessing performance effects of PE deals: the impact of these transactions on stock prices and accounting profits. There are two major problems with such studies that focus on firm-level financial returns to PE investments.
Another drawback of most PE studies is that the firm may not be the appropriate unit of analysis, given that many PE transactions occur below the firm level. That is, many PE transactions do not involve a change of ownership of an entire publicly traded firm, but rather the divestment of a unit of a large company, or a transaction that affects only a few plants. Thus, full-firm transactions involving publicly traded companies constitute only a small percentage of PE activity. A more desirable methodological approach is to examine the growth in TFP of plants and patterns of R&D investment before and after changes in ownership.
As a result, the most important studies of the real effects of PE transactions have been based on plant- or establishment-level data for TFP, as well as patent- and project-level data for innovation.
- PE investment, especially management buyouts, results in large, statistically significant improvements in TFP.
- This improvement in performance could not be attributed to reductions in R&D or capital investment, wage reductions, or layoffs of blue-collar personnel.
- Any downsizing that does occur in the aftermath of PE transactions tends to be focused mainly on white-collar personnel.
- Such post-buyout productivity gains were pervasive across industries.
- PE investment leads to higher quality patents.
- Entrepreneurial firms attracting PE investment are significantly more likely to license or sell their technology and engage in collaborative R&D.
- PE investment accelerates the commercialization of publicly funded research and the diffusion of knowledge.