The relative roles of factor inputs and productivity are estimated in explaining the level of economic development. For a large sample of countries, it is shown that international differences in factor inputs account for between two thirds and three quarters of international differences in output per worker if alternative identifying productivity assumptions and a quality-adjusted measure of human capital are employed. For a sample of OECD countries, it is found that all differences in output per worker can be attributed to differences in factor inputs, leaving no role for international productivity differences. This result supports the reasoning of a traditional neoclassical growth model.
The basic concern of any empirical work is to employ statistical data that correspond to the notion ...
In this paper we develop a two-sector growth model of optimizing agents and apply this model to the ...
This paper studies cross country differences in productivity from an open economy perspective by usi...
The stability of factor shares has long been considered one of the stylized facts of macroeconomic...
The paper presents evidence that the contribution of differences in total factor productivity (TFP) ...
This paper brings together development accounting techniques and the dual economy model to address t...
This paper provides a framework that decomposes aggregate total factor productivity (TFP) into a com...
This paper studies the proximate determinants of differences in output per worker across countries s...
The development accounting literature almost always assumes a Cobb-Douglas (CD) production function....
Why are some countries so much richer than others? Development Accounting is a first-pass attempt at...
Abstract: Neoclassical growth models of trade and factor flows based on differences in factor endowm...
Why are some countries so much richer than others? Why do some countries produce so much more output...
A growth accounting exercise is conducted for 88 countries for 1960-94 to examine the source of cros...
Do openness and human capital accumulation promote economic growth? While intuition argues yes, the ...
The basic concern of any empirical work is to employ statistical data that correspond to the notion ...
The basic concern of any empirical work is to employ statistical data that correspond to the notion ...
In this paper we develop a two-sector growth model of optimizing agents and apply this model to the ...
This paper studies cross country differences in productivity from an open economy perspective by usi...
The stability of factor shares has long been considered one of the stylized facts of macroeconomic...
The paper presents evidence that the contribution of differences in total factor productivity (TFP) ...
This paper brings together development accounting techniques and the dual economy model to address t...
This paper provides a framework that decomposes aggregate total factor productivity (TFP) into a com...
This paper studies the proximate determinants of differences in output per worker across countries s...
The development accounting literature almost always assumes a Cobb-Douglas (CD) production function....
Why are some countries so much richer than others? Development Accounting is a first-pass attempt at...
Abstract: Neoclassical growth models of trade and factor flows based on differences in factor endowm...
Why are some countries so much richer than others? Why do some countries produce so much more output...
A growth accounting exercise is conducted for 88 countries for 1960-94 to examine the source of cros...
Do openness and human capital accumulation promote economic growth? While intuition argues yes, the ...
The basic concern of any empirical work is to employ statistical data that correspond to the notion ...
The basic concern of any empirical work is to employ statistical data that correspond to the notion ...
In this paper we develop a two-sector growth model of optimizing agents and apply this model to the ...
This paper studies cross country differences in productivity from an open economy perspective by usi...