In his paper “Baumol’s diseases: a macroeconomic perspective”, Nordhaus (2008) applies a new testing framework in order to estimate the six hypotheses that lie at the core of Baumol’s (1967) model, following an industry perspective. In this work, I extend Nordhaus’ testing framework to estimate Baumol’s diseases in the US economy over the period 1999-2018 according to a subsystem perspective, by making use of the US Bureau of Economic Analysis input-output tables. In order to check whether Baumol’s diseases depend on the perspective that is followed, I apply both the usual industry perspective and the novel subsystem framework and compare the results. For both subsystems and industries, I do not find robust evidence in favour of the persist...
This paper argues that justifying lack of productivity improvements in public services by referring ...
In order to clarify the theoretical implications of recent employment growth in the services – and i...
The rapid growth of services in the U.S. has raised concern, captured by Baumol\u27s analytical mode...
William Baumol and his co-authors have analyzed the impact of differential productivity growth on th...
Baumol’s (1967) seminal model of structural change predicts that large service industries financed m...
Baumol's unbalanced growth model predicts the tendency of aggregate productivity growth to slow down...
I analyze structural change within the services sector and its implications for Baumol's cost disea...
Productivity gaps and « cost illness ». Contributions and limits of William J. Baumol's unbalanced g...
The business services industry represents a large and fast-growing chunk of the Dutch economy, appro...
We introduce two new indexes of labour productivity growth. Both indexes are intended to capture th...
In the late 1960s, William Baumol demonstrated that structurally unbalanced growth, with the associa...
This paper argues that there is reason to be skeptical about the idea that the transition to a servi...
This thesis examines the impact of diverging productivity gains across indus- tries in the Czech Rep...
William Baumol’s model predicts a steady increase in relative public sector prices (or costs) becaus...
According to Baumol's model of unbalanced growth, if resources are shifting towards industries where...
This paper argues that justifying lack of productivity improvements in public services by referring ...
In order to clarify the theoretical implications of recent employment growth in the services – and i...
The rapid growth of services in the U.S. has raised concern, captured by Baumol\u27s analytical mode...
William Baumol and his co-authors have analyzed the impact of differential productivity growth on th...
Baumol’s (1967) seminal model of structural change predicts that large service industries financed m...
Baumol's unbalanced growth model predicts the tendency of aggregate productivity growth to slow down...
I analyze structural change within the services sector and its implications for Baumol's cost disea...
Productivity gaps and « cost illness ». Contributions and limits of William J. Baumol's unbalanced g...
The business services industry represents a large and fast-growing chunk of the Dutch economy, appro...
We introduce two new indexes of labour productivity growth. Both indexes are intended to capture th...
In the late 1960s, William Baumol demonstrated that structurally unbalanced growth, with the associa...
This paper argues that there is reason to be skeptical about the idea that the transition to a servi...
This thesis examines the impact of diverging productivity gains across indus- tries in the Czech Rep...
William Baumol’s model predicts a steady increase in relative public sector prices (or costs) becaus...
According to Baumol's model of unbalanced growth, if resources are shifting towards industries where...
This paper argues that justifying lack of productivity improvements in public services by referring ...
In order to clarify the theoretical implications of recent employment growth in the services – and i...
The rapid growth of services in the U.S. has raised concern, captured by Baumol\u27s analytical mode...