This paper argues that initial estimates of productivity growth will tend to be much less reliable than those of most other macroeconomic aggregates, such as output or employment growth. Two distinct factors complicate productivity measurement. (1) When production increases, factor inputs typically increase as well. Productivity growth is therefore typically less variable than output growth, meaning that measurement errors will tend to be relatively more important. (2) Revisions to published estimates of production and factor inputs tend to be less highly correlated than the published estimates themselves. This further increases the impact of data revisions on published productivity estimates
Researchers interested in estimating productivity can choose from an array of method-ologies, each w...
Researchers interested in estimating productivity can choose from an array of method-ologies, each w...
Photocopied material - reissue of Canterbury Chamber of Commerce economic bulletin, no. 580, publish...
This paper argues that initial estimates of productivity growth will tend to be much less reliable t...
Productivity growth is carefully scrutinized by macroeconomists because it plays key roles in unders...
Researchers interested in estimating productivity can choose from an array of methodologies, each wi...
Aggregate rates of productivity growth are among the most closely watched indicators of economic per...
This thesis studies empirically whether measurement errors in aggregate production statistics affect...
Total factor productivity growth (TFPG) measures the increase in output not due to the increases of ...
Relative productivity levels are used intensively in analyzing cross-country growth, but often based...
Relative productivity levels are used intensively in analyzing cross-country growth, but often based...
This article explores the reasons why GMM estimators of production function parameters are generally...
Researchers interested in estimating productivity can choose from an array of methodologies, each wi...
Productivity growth has tended to be slower in service industries than in goods industries. Anita Wö...
Researchers interested in estimating productivity can choose from an array of methodologies, each wi...
Researchers interested in estimating productivity can choose from an array of method-ologies, each w...
Researchers interested in estimating productivity can choose from an array of method-ologies, each w...
Photocopied material - reissue of Canterbury Chamber of Commerce economic bulletin, no. 580, publish...
This paper argues that initial estimates of productivity growth will tend to be much less reliable t...
Productivity growth is carefully scrutinized by macroeconomists because it plays key roles in unders...
Researchers interested in estimating productivity can choose from an array of methodologies, each wi...
Aggregate rates of productivity growth are among the most closely watched indicators of economic per...
This thesis studies empirically whether measurement errors in aggregate production statistics affect...
Total factor productivity growth (TFPG) measures the increase in output not due to the increases of ...
Relative productivity levels are used intensively in analyzing cross-country growth, but often based...
Relative productivity levels are used intensively in analyzing cross-country growth, but often based...
This article explores the reasons why GMM estimators of production function parameters are generally...
Researchers interested in estimating productivity can choose from an array of methodologies, each wi...
Productivity growth has tended to be slower in service industries than in goods industries. Anita Wö...
Researchers interested in estimating productivity can choose from an array of methodologies, each wi...
Researchers interested in estimating productivity can choose from an array of method-ologies, each w...
Researchers interested in estimating productivity can choose from an array of method-ologies, each w...
Photocopied material - reissue of Canterbury Chamber of Commerce economic bulletin, no. 580, publish...