4.6 Article

Productivity homogenisation trends of six advanced industrial economies: A vertically hyper-integrated approach

Journal

STRUCTURAL CHANGE AND ECONOMIC DYNAMICS
Volume 61, Issue -, Pages 495-511

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.strueco.2021.08.004

Keywords

Productivity; Vertically hyper-integrated sectors; Input-Output analysis

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This study applies an Input-Output accounting framework to measure productivity trends across six advanced industrial economies. The findings suggest a reversal of the convergence of hyper-integrated productivity levels between countries during the period of 2007-2015. Additionally, the economies with the highest overall hyper-integrated labor productivity growth experienced the lowest productivity gains from wages.
The present paper applies an Input-Output accounting framework, based on the logical device of vertical hyper-integration, to measure productivity trends across six advanced industrial economies (US, Germany, Japan, UK, France and Italy) during recent decades. Rather than measuring performance from the income side of the economy, as in traditional TFP growth analyses, disaggregated productivity changes are approximated from the expenditure side, i.e. the nominal counterpart to the system of physical quantities. Empirical findings suggest that the central tendency for convergence of hyper-integrated productivity levels across countries within each growing subsystem between 1995 and 2007 has been reversed between 2007 and 2015. And while service subsystems coincided in their direction of change, primary cum-manufacturing sectors experienced more heterogeneous dynamics. Moreover, productivity gains accruing to wages were amongst the lowest in the three economies with highest overall hyper-integrated labour productivity growth.(c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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