preprintLondon School of Economics and Political Science Research Online (London School of Economics and Political Science)Jan 1, 2005Closed access
Accounting for cross-country income differences
Abstract
Why are some countries so much richer than others? Development Accounting is a first-pass attempt at organizing the answer around two proximate determinants: factors of production and efficiency. It answers the question "how much of the cross-country income variance can be attributed to differences in (physical and human) capital, and how much to differences in the efficiency with which capital is used?" Hence, it does for the cross-section what growth accounting does in the time series. The current consensus is that efficiency is at least as important as capital in explaining income differences. I survey the data and the basic methods that lead to this consensus, and explore several extensions. I argue that…
Citation impact
721
total citations
- FWCI
- 121.95
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 0
Citations per year
Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Economics
- Variance (accounting)
- Human capital
- Production (economics)
- Growth accounting
- Capital (architecture)
- Comprehensive income
- Factors of production
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- No poverty
No related works found for this paper.