Although Ireland is a high productivity country, it has not been immune from the global productivity slowdown, with the pace of growth on a downward trend throughout the 2000s. To identify the determinants behind the aggregate productivity growth in Ireland we use a firm-level panel dataset from the CSO to study productivity patterns and trends distributed by percentile, sector, ownership, as well the efficiency of resource allocation. Our results show a widening of the productivity gap between the most and least productive firms, consistent with cross-country results from the OECD. Results also confirm that aggregate productivity statistics are heavily dominated by a small number of foreign owned firms, leaving Ireland’s productivity prone...
Overall labour productivity in the Irish manufacturing sector increased by 158 per cent between 1991...
Abstract: This paper reviews real output, employment and productivity trends in the Irish economy ov...
In this Note we examine the contribution to Irish economic performance over the period 1987 to 2013 ...
Productivity is the ultimate driver of sustainable increases in living standards. While Ireland is a...
This paper is aimed to empirically test for Ireland the “granular hypothesis” (Gabaix 2011), which p...
Productivity growth is a key determinant of national competitiveness, enabling firms to compete succ...
This paper provides a review of aggregate and sectoral trends in Ireland’s historical and more recen...
Productivity growth is critical for enterprise competitiveness, economic growth, the financing of pu...
While growth in output and employment remains relatively strong in the Irish economy, there has been...
In recent years it has been very difficult to understand the performance of the Irish economy. Howev...
As well as their direct effects on output and employment, the attraction of foreign direct investmen...
This paper combines a literature identifying the sources of productivity growth with a literature ex...
Abstract: This paper examines the reasons for the recent divergence in US and European productivity ...
There are growing literatures on identifying the sources of productivity growth and on exploring the...
AbstRAct This chapter reviews trends in real output, employment and labour productivity in Ireland b...
Overall labour productivity in the Irish manufacturing sector increased by 158 per cent between 1991...
Abstract: This paper reviews real output, employment and productivity trends in the Irish economy ov...
In this Note we examine the contribution to Irish economic performance over the period 1987 to 2013 ...
Productivity is the ultimate driver of sustainable increases in living standards. While Ireland is a...
This paper is aimed to empirically test for Ireland the “granular hypothesis” (Gabaix 2011), which p...
Productivity growth is a key determinant of national competitiveness, enabling firms to compete succ...
This paper provides a review of aggregate and sectoral trends in Ireland’s historical and more recen...
Productivity growth is critical for enterprise competitiveness, economic growth, the financing of pu...
While growth in output and employment remains relatively strong in the Irish economy, there has been...
In recent years it has been very difficult to understand the performance of the Irish economy. Howev...
As well as their direct effects on output and employment, the attraction of foreign direct investmen...
This paper combines a literature identifying the sources of productivity growth with a literature ex...
Abstract: This paper examines the reasons for the recent divergence in US and European productivity ...
There are growing literatures on identifying the sources of productivity growth and on exploring the...
AbstRAct This chapter reviews trends in real output, employment and labour productivity in Ireland b...
Overall labour productivity in the Irish manufacturing sector increased by 158 per cent between 1991...
Abstract: This paper reviews real output, employment and productivity trends in the Irish economy ov...
In this Note we examine the contribution to Irish economic performance over the period 1987 to 2013 ...