Even though differences in sectoral total factor productivity are at the heart of Ricardian trade theory and many models of growth and development, very little is known about their size and their form. In this paper we try to fill this gap by using a Hybrid-Ricardo-Heckscher-Ohlin trade model and bilateral sectoral trade data to overcome the data problem that has limited previous studies, which have used input and output data to back out productivities, to a small number of OECD economies. We provide a comparable set of sectoral productivities for 24 manufacturing sectors and more than sixty countries at all stages of development. Our results show that TFP differences in manufacturing sectors between rich and poor countries are substantial ...
We employ a recent empirical strategy to estimate country-specific and time-varying total factor pro...
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...
Developing economies tend to export more skill-intensive products as they become more productive. Th...
Even though differences in sectoral total factor productivity are at the heart of Ricardian trade th...
This paper studies cross country differences in productivity from an open economy perspective by usi...
We introduce a novel methodology to measure the relative TFP of the tradeable sector across countrie...
Differences in total factor productivity (TFP) are the dominant source of the large variation of in...
Which sectors are most responsible for the low total factor productivities of developing countries? ...
Abstract of associated article: This paper evaluates the role of sectoral heterogeneity in determini...
The Neo-classical model of international trade assumes that the total factor productivity (TFP) of a...
We study the importance of input-output (IO) linkages and sectoral productivity (TFP) in determining...
We use comparable micro level panel data for 14 countries and a set of identically specified empiric...
This paper provides a framework that decomposes aggregate total factor productivity (TFP) into a com...
. We present several new measures of gross-output-based total factor productivity (TFP) at the secto...
This study aims to estimate the relative Total Factor Productivity (TFP) levels and its comparative ...
We employ a recent empirical strategy to estimate country-specific and time-varying total factor pro...
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...
Developing economies tend to export more skill-intensive products as they become more productive. Th...
Even though differences in sectoral total factor productivity are at the heart of Ricardian trade th...
This paper studies cross country differences in productivity from an open economy perspective by usi...
We introduce a novel methodology to measure the relative TFP of the tradeable sector across countrie...
Differences in total factor productivity (TFP) are the dominant source of the large variation of in...
Which sectors are most responsible for the low total factor productivities of developing countries? ...
Abstract of associated article: This paper evaluates the role of sectoral heterogeneity in determini...
The Neo-classical model of international trade assumes that the total factor productivity (TFP) of a...
We study the importance of input-output (IO) linkages and sectoral productivity (TFP) in determining...
We use comparable micro level panel data for 14 countries and a set of identically specified empiric...
This paper provides a framework that decomposes aggregate total factor productivity (TFP) into a com...
. We present several new measures of gross-output-based total factor productivity (TFP) at the secto...
This study aims to estimate the relative Total Factor Productivity (TFP) levels and its comparative ...
We employ a recent empirical strategy to estimate country-specific and time-varying total factor pro...
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...
Developing economies tend to export more skill-intensive products as they become more productive. Th...