ABSTRACT In an article in the 2006 volume of this Review, Temple presented a defence of the use of the aggregate production function in growth theory in the light of various criticisms that have been levelled at it. These criticisms include the Cambridge Capital Theory Controversies, various aggregation problems, and the problems posed by the use of value data and the underlying accounting identity. We show that Temple has underestimated the seriousness of these criticisms, especially the last one, which vitiates the concept of the aggregate production function. Because of the identity, estimates of putative aggregate production functions, such as the aggregate elasticity of substitution, cannot be interpreted as reflecting the underlying t...
This paper reconsiders the argument that empirical estimations of aggregate production functions may...
Abstract: Growth models in the tradition of Solow and Romer are framed in terms of production functi...
ABSTRACT Over the last twenty years or so, mainstream economists have become more interested in spat...
Abstract: It has long been shown that, because of the aggregation problem and the Cambridge Capital ...
Abstract In a reply to Felipe and McCombie (2010a), Temple (2010) has largely ignored the main argum...
Kaldor put forward his technical progress function as an alternative to the neoclassical aggregate p...
Aggregate production functions are still widely used four decades after it was conceded that they co...
The literature on aggregation has shown that the conditions for successful aggregation of micro prod...
Standard postulates concerning the aggregate production function are about marginal productivities- ...
Kaldor put forward his technical progress function as an alternative to the neoclas- sical aggregat...
Growth theory traditionally assumed the existence of an aggregate production function, whose existen...
The CobbDouglas function is today one of the most widely adopted assumptions in economic modeling, y...
The aggregate production function is a fundamental neoclassical construct. At the theoretical level,...
Growth theory traditionally assumed the existence of an aggregate production function, whose existen...
Growth theory traditionally assumed the existence of an aggregate production function, whose existen...
This paper reconsiders the argument that empirical estimations of aggregate production functions may...
Abstract: Growth models in the tradition of Solow and Romer are framed in terms of production functi...
ABSTRACT Over the last twenty years or so, mainstream economists have become more interested in spat...
Abstract: It has long been shown that, because of the aggregation problem and the Cambridge Capital ...
Abstract In a reply to Felipe and McCombie (2010a), Temple (2010) has largely ignored the main argum...
Kaldor put forward his technical progress function as an alternative to the neoclassical aggregate p...
Aggregate production functions are still widely used four decades after it was conceded that they co...
The literature on aggregation has shown that the conditions for successful aggregation of micro prod...
Standard postulates concerning the aggregate production function are about marginal productivities- ...
Kaldor put forward his technical progress function as an alternative to the neoclas- sical aggregat...
Growth theory traditionally assumed the existence of an aggregate production function, whose existen...
The CobbDouglas function is today one of the most widely adopted assumptions in economic modeling, y...
The aggregate production function is a fundamental neoclassical construct. At the theoretical level,...
Growth theory traditionally assumed the existence of an aggregate production function, whose existen...
Growth theory traditionally assumed the existence of an aggregate production function, whose existen...
This paper reconsiders the argument that empirical estimations of aggregate production functions may...
Abstract: Growth models in the tradition of Solow and Romer are framed in terms of production functi...
ABSTRACT Over the last twenty years or so, mainstream economists have become more interested in spat...