We study the origins of labor productivity growth and its differences across sectors. In our model, sectors employ workers of different occupations and various forms of capital, none of which are perfect substitutes, and technology evolves at the sector-factor cell level. Using the model we infer technologies from US data over 1960-2017. We find that sectoral differences in labor productivity growth are largely due to sectoral differences in the growth rate of routine labor augmenting technologies. Neither capital accumulation nor the occupational employment structure within sectors explains much of the sectoral differences in labor productivity growth
Notion almost unknown before 1950, labor productivity is now commonly used by economists, engineers,...
The primary objective of this study is to analyse the impact of human capital accumulation on produc...
This papers studies the sectoral differences in the impacts of various innovation policies, human ca...
This study provides some empirical evidence and quantification of differences in labor productivity...
In this paper we develop a two-sector growth model of optimizing agents and apply this model to the ...
This paper develops a parametric decomposition framework of labor productivity growth relaxing the a...
How much of the convergence in labor productivity that we observe in manufacturing is due to converg...
This paper presents empirical evidence on the determinants of industry-level multifactor productivit...
Occupational and sectoral labor market patterns display a significant overlap. This implies that eco...
We develop a multi-sector general equilibrium model in which productivity growth is driven by the pr...
Abstract This study provides some empirical evidence and quantification of differences in labor prod...
The sectoral composition of the US economy has shifted dramatically in the recent decades. At the sa...
We study a multi-sector model of growth with differences in TFP growth rates across sectors and deri...
Labor productivity in developed countries is analyzed and modeled. Modeling is based on our previous...
Labour productivity is defined as output per unit of labour input. Economists acknowledge that techn...
Notion almost unknown before 1950, labor productivity is now commonly used by economists, engineers,...
The primary objective of this study is to analyse the impact of human capital accumulation on produc...
This papers studies the sectoral differences in the impacts of various innovation policies, human ca...
This study provides some empirical evidence and quantification of differences in labor productivity...
In this paper we develop a two-sector growth model of optimizing agents and apply this model to the ...
This paper develops a parametric decomposition framework of labor productivity growth relaxing the a...
How much of the convergence in labor productivity that we observe in manufacturing is due to converg...
This paper presents empirical evidence on the determinants of industry-level multifactor productivit...
Occupational and sectoral labor market patterns display a significant overlap. This implies that eco...
We develop a multi-sector general equilibrium model in which productivity growth is driven by the pr...
Abstract This study provides some empirical evidence and quantification of differences in labor prod...
The sectoral composition of the US economy has shifted dramatically in the recent decades. At the sa...
We study a multi-sector model of growth with differences in TFP growth rates across sectors and deri...
Labor productivity in developed countries is analyzed and modeled. Modeling is based on our previous...
Labour productivity is defined as output per unit of labour input. Economists acknowledge that techn...
Notion almost unknown before 1950, labor productivity is now commonly used by economists, engineers,...
The primary objective of this study is to analyse the impact of human capital accumulation on produc...
This papers studies the sectoral differences in the impacts of various innovation policies, human ca...