Renewed interest in economic growth has encouraged studies of how different sectors have contributed to convergence trends. Comparing productivity levels across countries is notoriously tricky, but one attractive approach has been to deflate sector value added by the PPP exchange rate for GDP. There is a quite fundamental problem with this approach which, by measuring the purchasing power of sectoral incomes over GDP, biases the result towards reflecting the difference in GDP per head. In less extreme form the same problem applies to the use of a PPP for gross output of that sector
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...
Renewed interest in economic growth has encouraged studies of how different sectors have contributed...
International comparisons of productivity have used exchange rates or purchasing power parity (PPP) ...
International comparisons of the level of labor or total factor productivity have used exchange rate...
Abstract International comparisons of productivity have used exchange rates or purchasing power pari...
Abstract International comparisons of productivity have used exchange rates or purchasing power pari...
International comparisons of productivity have used exchange rates or purchasing power parity (PPP) ...
International comparisons of productivity have used exchange rates or purchasing power parity (PPP) ...
International comparisons of productivity have used exchange rates or purchasing power parity (PPP) ...
This paper introduces a new method for simultaneously comparing industry productivity across countri...
This paper introduces a new method for simultaneously comparing industry productivity across countri...
Abstract: This paper revisits the role of sectors in aggregate convergence. The existing evidence is...
Using panel data for selected national economies, the study estimates relative price changes stemmin...
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...
Renewed interest in economic growth has encouraged studies of how different sectors have contributed...
International comparisons of productivity have used exchange rates or purchasing power parity (PPP) ...
International comparisons of the level of labor or total factor productivity have used exchange rate...
Abstract International comparisons of productivity have used exchange rates or purchasing power pari...
Abstract International comparisons of productivity have used exchange rates or purchasing power pari...
International comparisons of productivity have used exchange rates or purchasing power parity (PPP) ...
International comparisons of productivity have used exchange rates or purchasing power parity (PPP) ...
International comparisons of productivity have used exchange rates or purchasing power parity (PPP) ...
This paper introduces a new method for simultaneously comparing industry productivity across countri...
This paper introduces a new method for simultaneously comparing industry productivity across countri...
Abstract: This paper revisits the role of sectors in aggregate convergence. The existing evidence is...
Using panel data for selected national economies, the study estimates relative price changes stemmin...
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...