articleAmerican Economic ReviewDec 1, 2010Closed access

An Exploration of Technology Diffusion

Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center · Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

We develop a model that, at the aggregate level, is similar to the one-sector neoclassical growth model; at the disaggregate level, it has implications for the path of observable measures of technology adoption. We estimate it using data on the diffusion of 15 technologies in 166 countries over the last two centuries. Our results reveal that, on average, countries have adopted technologies 45 years after their invention. There is substantial variation across technologies and countries. Newer technologies have been adopted faster than old ones. The cross-country variation in the adoption of technologies accounts for at least 25 percent of per capita income differences. (JEL O33, O41, O47)

Citation impact

615
total citations
FWCI
73.35
Percentile
100%
References
62
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Economics
  • Per capita
  • Per capita income
  • Emerging technologies
  • Diffusion
  • Econometrics
  • Variation (astronomy)
  • Aggregate (composite)
No related works found for this paper.