Technological Change, Technological Catch-up, and Capital Deepening: Relative Contributions to Growth and Convergence
Financial Research (Hungary) · University of California, Riverside
Abstract
We decompose labor-productivity growth into components attributable to (1) technological change (shifts in the world production frontier), (2) technological catch-up (movements toward or away from the frontier), and (3) capital accumulation (movement along the frontier). The world production frontier is constructed using deterministic methods requiring no specification of functional form for the technology nor any assumption about market structure or the absence of market imperfections. We analyze the evolution of the cross-country distribution of labor productivity in terms of the tripartite decomposition, finding that technological change is decidedly nonneutral and that both growth and bipolar international…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 39.89
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 42
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Frontier
- Economics
- Production–possibility frontier
- Technological change
- Convergence (economics)
- Divergence (linguistics)
- Productivity
- Production (economics)
- Decent work and economic growth