This article presents a group of exercises of level and growth decomposition of output per worker using cross-country data from 1960 to 2000. It is shown that at least until 1975 factors of production (capital and education) were the main source of output dispersion across economies and that productivity variance was considerably smaller than in late years. Only after this date the prominence of productivity started to show up in the data, as the majority of the literature has found. The growth decomposition exercises showed that the reversal of relative importance of productivity vis-a-vis factors is explained by the very good (bad) performance of productivity of fast (slow) growing economies. Although growth in the period, on average, is ...
A growth accounting exercise is conducted for 88 countries for 1960-94 to examine the source of cros...
In this paper we add new results to the emerging field of investigating productivity levels rather t...
Using intercountry input-output tables and disaggregated employment data, we decompose labor product...
This article presents a group of exercises of level and growth decomposition of output per worker us...
This article presents a group of exercises of leveI and growth decomposition of output per worker us...
This article presents a group of exercises of leveI and growth decomposition of output per worker us...
Why have some countries done so much better than others over the recent past? In order to shed new l...
This paper studies the proximate determinants of differences in output per worker across countries s...
Why have some countries done so much better than others over the recent past? This paper sheds light...
The paper aims to determine the single-factor productivity (SFP) of capital and labor in 20 member c...
This paper develops a parametric decomposition framework of labor productivity growth relaxing the a...
Recent research shows that productivity differences are more important than differences in accumulat...
© 2005 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology...
The paper presents evidence that the contribution of differences in total factor productivity (TFP) ...
This paper investigates the forces driving output growth, namely technological, efficiency, and inpu...
A growth accounting exercise is conducted for 88 countries for 1960-94 to examine the source of cros...
In this paper we add new results to the emerging field of investigating productivity levels rather t...
Using intercountry input-output tables and disaggregated employment data, we decompose labor product...
This article presents a group of exercises of level and growth decomposition of output per worker us...
This article presents a group of exercises of leveI and growth decomposition of output per worker us...
This article presents a group of exercises of leveI and growth decomposition of output per worker us...
Why have some countries done so much better than others over the recent past? In order to shed new l...
This paper studies the proximate determinants of differences in output per worker across countries s...
Why have some countries done so much better than others over the recent past? This paper sheds light...
The paper aims to determine the single-factor productivity (SFP) of capital and labor in 20 member c...
This paper develops a parametric decomposition framework of labor productivity growth relaxing the a...
Recent research shows that productivity differences are more important than differences in accumulat...
© 2005 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology...
The paper presents evidence that the contribution of differences in total factor productivity (TFP) ...
This paper investigates the forces driving output growth, namely technological, efficiency, and inpu...
A growth accounting exercise is conducted for 88 countries for 1960-94 to examine the source of cros...
In this paper we add new results to the emerging field of investigating productivity levels rather t...
Using intercountry input-output tables and disaggregated employment data, we decompose labor product...