Dollar stores have a bad reputation for negatively impacting local communities (see here and here, for example). Some communities have pushed back, resisting the opening of new stores. One thing that dollar stores are accused of is hurting other local businesses, but is that the case?
That is the question addressed in this new article by Amelia Biehl, Amir Ferreira Neto (both Florida Gulf Coast University), and Juan Gomez (University of Iowa), published in the journal Economic Modelling (ungated earlier version here). They focus on the opening of new Dollar General stores in Florida, using data from Dun and Bradstreet's National Establishment Time Series dataset between 1990 and 2019. Over that period, there were a lot of store openings, with the state going from 202 stores to 1014 between 2000 and 2019. That's about one store per 23,000 people in Florida by the end of the period.
Biehl et al. look at the impact on revenue, employment, and probability of firm closure, by comparing firms operating within a half-mile of a new Dollar General store opening (the 'treated firms'), with firms operating between one and 1.5 miles away (the 'control firms'), in what is termed a difference-in-differences analysis. Biehl et al. limit their focus to firms with fewer than 50 employees, as they are more likely to be impacted by the opening of Dollar General. This still results in a sample of over 7.5 million observations of over 1.1 million firms. The hypothesis is that these small firms operating in close proximity to the new Dollar General store will be affected by its opening, whereas small firms located further away will not be.
Their results are summarised in Figure 4 from the paper, which shows an event study version of the analysis:
That figure shows the impact on each variable (revenue, employment, and probability of firm closure), year-by-year, from eight years before the store opening to eight years after. Focusing on the time after the store opening (from time zero onwards, because time -1 is the year of store opening), the positive and significant effects show that employment increases, revenue increases, and the probability of firm closure increases for treated firms compared with control firms after the store opening. These results are consistent with the overall difference-in-difference results.
However, there is a slight problem here. One of the assumptions of difference-in-differences is that there are parallel trends - that treated and control firms would have followed similar paths in terms of revenue, employment, and probability of closure, if no Dollar General store had opened. Obviously, this is impossible to establish for sure, because we don't know the counterfactual (we don't know what would have happened if Dollar General had not opened). But there is one indicator that is often used to argue in favour of parallel trends, which is to look at the estimated coefficients from the time period before the treatment started. If those coefficients are statistically insignificant, it establishes that there is little evidence that the treatment and control firms were diverging before the Dollar General even opened. But for this analysis, that isn't the case. Take a look back at Figure 4 shown above. There is a clear trend in the coefficients even before Dollar General opened, and that trend appears to continue through to the period after the Dollar General opens. If anything, the coefficients at time -1 (which is the year of opening) are unusually inconsistent with the coefficients on either side of them.
The failure of this analysis to consider a violation of the parallel trends assumption should make us very cautious about taking these results at face value. At least, I don't think they should be interpreted as showing that Dollar General leads to the closure of some local businesses, with the surviving firms having higher revenues and employment (which is how Biehl et al. interpret their results). Instead, I think it possibly shows that Dollar General stores locate in areas where stores are already closing (notice in Figure 4 that probability of closure is already positive and statistically significant for treated firms compared with control firms before the Dollar General opens).
Biehl et al. go on to look at the impacts on firms by industry and by retail category. However, given that their headline results don't really show what they are purported to show, I would place even less weight on the industry-specific results. Besides which, at that stage of the analysis they are doing multiple comparisons, meaning that some of their results might show up as statistically significant simply by chance, which they haven't adjusted for.
Overall, the results from the main analysis in this article are consistent with Dollar General finding new locations where there are open storefronts (because other firms have already closed), and setting up shop in those locations. So, it may be that it isn't the Dollar General that causes firm closures, and higher revenue and employment for surviving firms, but something else like local market conditions more generally. Considering that possibility, a Dollar General opening would be a symptom of those negative local market conditions, not a cause of them.
