Real equipment investment in the United States has boomed in recent years, led by soaring investment in computers. We find that traditional aggregate econometric models completely fail to capture the magnitude of this recent growth - mainly because these models neglect to address two features that are crucial (and unique) to the current investment boom. First, the pace at which firms replace depreciated capital has increased. Second, investment has been more sensitive to the cost of capital. We document that these two features stem from the special behavior of investment in computers and therefore propose a disaggregated approach. This produces an econometric model that successfully explains the 1990s equipment investment boom
A satisfactory account of the postwar growth experience of the United States should be able to come ...
Evidence on the cost of business equipment investment supports a new way of understanding growth and...
This paper develops a new technique for measuring the effect of computer usage on U.S. productivity ...
Real equipment investment in the United States boomed in the 1990s, led by soaring investment in com...
In recent work, Stacey Tevlin and Karl Whelan argue that aggregate econometric models fail to captur...
In recent work, Stacey Tevlin and Karl Whelan argue that aggregate econometric models fail to captur...
A study of capital expenditure trends identifies investment in information technology as a major fac...
A study of capital expenditure trends identifies investment in information technology as a major fac...
For the 1990s, the basic neoclassical growth model predicts a depressed economy, when in fact the US...
The basic neoclassical growth model accounts well for the postwar cyclical behavior of the U.S. econ...
A ccording to the Business Cycle DatingCommittee of the National Bureau ofEconomic Research, the nat...
By extrapolating Gordon’s (1990) measures of the quality-bias in the official price indexes, we cons...
Together with a sense of entering a New Economy, the US experi-enced in the second half of the 1990s...
Most macroeconomic forecasters underestimated global investment during the late 1990s. One potential...
The rate of capital formation by businesses has long been among the most closely watched elements of...
A satisfactory account of the postwar growth experience of the United States should be able to come ...
Evidence on the cost of business equipment investment supports a new way of understanding growth and...
This paper develops a new technique for measuring the effect of computer usage on U.S. productivity ...
Real equipment investment in the United States boomed in the 1990s, led by soaring investment in com...
In recent work, Stacey Tevlin and Karl Whelan argue that aggregate econometric models fail to captur...
In recent work, Stacey Tevlin and Karl Whelan argue that aggregate econometric models fail to captur...
A study of capital expenditure trends identifies investment in information technology as a major fac...
A study of capital expenditure trends identifies investment in information technology as a major fac...
For the 1990s, the basic neoclassical growth model predicts a depressed economy, when in fact the US...
The basic neoclassical growth model accounts well for the postwar cyclical behavior of the U.S. econ...
A ccording to the Business Cycle DatingCommittee of the National Bureau ofEconomic Research, the nat...
By extrapolating Gordon’s (1990) measures of the quality-bias in the official price indexes, we cons...
Together with a sense of entering a New Economy, the US experi-enced in the second half of the 1990s...
Most macroeconomic forecasters underestimated global investment during the late 1990s. One potential...
The rate of capital formation by businesses has long been among the most closely watched elements of...
A satisfactory account of the postwar growth experience of the United States should be able to come ...
Evidence on the cost of business equipment investment supports a new way of understanding growth and...
This paper develops a new technique for measuring the effect of computer usage on U.S. productivity ...