This paper re-examines UK productivity growth in the decades before World War I using a new dataset compiled by Thomas and Dimsdale (2017). We find that the productivity slowdown of the early 20th century was quite modest and does not deserve to be called a climacteric. A more serious slowdown in labour productivity growth occurred in the 1870s. Neither of these episodes should be regarded as a precedent for the current severe deterioration in UK productivity performance. Nor should a late-Victorian productivity slowdown be attributed to the end of the steam age despite the popularity of this belief
I examine the implications of technological change for productivity, real wages and factor shares du...
This paper provides a time-series analysis of recent annual estimates of real GDP and industrial out...
Characterization of late nineteenth-century British economic performance rests heavily on identifyin...
This paper re-examines UK productivity growth in the decades before World War I using a new dataset ...
This paper updates the classic growth accounting research of the early 1980s taking account of impro...
This paper updates the classic growth accounting research of the early 1980s taking account of impro...
This paper updates the classic growth accounting research of the early 1980s taking account of impro...
We estimate trend UK labour productivity growth using a Hodrick-Prescott filter method. We use the r...
This paper presents new estimates of total factor productivity growth in Britain for the period 1770...
We develop new aggregate TFP growth estimates for the United States between 1899 and 1941, and secto...
Recent developments in endogenous growth models have enabled researchers to reconsider some key even...
This article provides a new benchmark estimate of comparative Germany/U.K. labor productivity in man...
This paper considers the paradoxical co-existence of a productivity slowdown and exciting new techno...
This paper examines the role of competition in productivity performance in Britain over the period f...
We explore the links between openness and economic performance in Britain between 1870 and 1999. The...
I examine the implications of technological change for productivity, real wages and factor shares du...
This paper provides a time-series analysis of recent annual estimates of real GDP and industrial out...
Characterization of late nineteenth-century British economic performance rests heavily on identifyin...
This paper re-examines UK productivity growth in the decades before World War I using a new dataset ...
This paper updates the classic growth accounting research of the early 1980s taking account of impro...
This paper updates the classic growth accounting research of the early 1980s taking account of impro...
This paper updates the classic growth accounting research of the early 1980s taking account of impro...
We estimate trend UK labour productivity growth using a Hodrick-Prescott filter method. We use the r...
This paper presents new estimates of total factor productivity growth in Britain for the period 1770...
We develop new aggregate TFP growth estimates for the United States between 1899 and 1941, and secto...
Recent developments in endogenous growth models have enabled researchers to reconsider some key even...
This article provides a new benchmark estimate of comparative Germany/U.K. labor productivity in man...
This paper considers the paradoxical co-existence of a productivity slowdown and exciting new techno...
This paper examines the role of competition in productivity performance in Britain over the period f...
We explore the links between openness and economic performance in Britain between 1870 and 1999. The...
I examine the implications of technological change for productivity, real wages and factor shares du...
This paper provides a time-series analysis of recent annual estimates of real GDP and industrial out...
Characterization of late nineteenth-century British economic performance rests heavily on identifyin...