Labor productivity in German manufacturing lagged behind the United States in the early twentieth century. Traditionally, this is attributed to dichotomous technology paths across the Atlantic. However, various industry case studies suggest rapid diffusion of U.S. technologies in Germany. We develop a novel framework to reconcile these findings. Labor-productivity gaps are decomposed into differences in technology and differences in the efficiency with which technology is used. We find that by 1936 in the majority of industries inefficient assimilation of modern technologies - and not the use of different technology - accounted for most of the U.S./German labor-productivity gap
America’s lead over Europe in manufacturing productivity from the late nineteenth century onwards ha...
Recent research on international productivity comparisons with historical data has encountered large...
This response offers a critical appraisal of the claim of Albrecht Ritschl to have found a possible ...
Labor productivity in German manufacturing lagged behind the United States in the early twentieth ce...
This paper studies the importance of establishment size for the German/US labour-productivity gap in...
This paper studies the importance of establishment size for the German/US labour-productivity gap in...
This article provides a new benchmark estimate of comparative Germany/U.K. labor productivity in man...
This paper sets out the evolution of Anglo-German comparative labour productivity levels since 1870,...
A sectoral analysis of comparative labor productivity levels over the period 1870 to 1990 suggests m...
This article provides a new benchmark estimate of comparative Germany/U.K. labor productivity in man...
In this paper we relate trends in the accumulation of human capital in Britain, Germany and the Unit...
This paper aims to examine the difference between US and European manufacturing before and during th...
Recent research on international productivity comparisons has focused on the discrepancies between b...
The manufacturing productivity gap between the U.S. and the U.K. became much larger during the inter...
Beginning in the 1910s, Europeans began to believe that on the other side of the Atlantic an extraor...
America’s lead over Europe in manufacturing productivity from the late nineteenth century onwards ha...
Recent research on international productivity comparisons with historical data has encountered large...
This response offers a critical appraisal of the claim of Albrecht Ritschl to have found a possible ...
Labor productivity in German manufacturing lagged behind the United States in the early twentieth ce...
This paper studies the importance of establishment size for the German/US labour-productivity gap in...
This paper studies the importance of establishment size for the German/US labour-productivity gap in...
This article provides a new benchmark estimate of comparative Germany/U.K. labor productivity in man...
This paper sets out the evolution of Anglo-German comparative labour productivity levels since 1870,...
A sectoral analysis of comparative labor productivity levels over the period 1870 to 1990 suggests m...
This article provides a new benchmark estimate of comparative Germany/U.K. labor productivity in man...
In this paper we relate trends in the accumulation of human capital in Britain, Germany and the Unit...
This paper aims to examine the difference between US and European manufacturing before and during th...
Recent research on international productivity comparisons has focused on the discrepancies between b...
The manufacturing productivity gap between the U.S. and the U.K. became much larger during the inter...
Beginning in the 1910s, Europeans began to believe that on the other side of the Atlantic an extraor...
America’s lead over Europe in manufacturing productivity from the late nineteenth century onwards ha...
Recent research on international productivity comparisons with historical data has encountered large...
This response offers a critical appraisal of the claim of Albrecht Ritschl to have found a possible ...