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Journal ArticleDOI

A new set of international comparisons of real product and price levels estimates for 130 countries, 1950–1985

Robert Summers, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1988 - 
- Vol. 34, Iss: 1, pp 1-25
TLDR
The Penn World Table (Mark 4) as mentioned in this paper is a completely revised and updated expansion of an equivalent table published by the authors in 1984, drawing on the data of two previously unavailable international comparison benchmark studies.
Abstract
A new set of international comparisons covering the period 1950–85 is developed here for 121 market and 9 centrally planned economies. This new so-called Penn World Table (Mark 4), a completely revised and updated expansion of an equivalent table published by the authors in 1984, draws on the data of two previously unavailable international comparison benchmark studies. This article presents a detailed description of all estimation procedures, and excerpts from the overall DATA TABLE covering two years, 1980 and 1985. Three computer diskettes accompanying this article (and also available from the authors) contain the complete 36–year, 60,000 entry DATA TABLE in a form that economizes on scarce journal space and is immediately machine-readable. For the 121 market economies, the DATA TABLE gives annually, in addition to population and exchange rates, real product and price level estimates for four different national income concepts, and for the major subaggregates, consumption, investment, and government. Only population and real gross domestic product estimates are given for the nine centrally planned economies, however. This new table is one more step toward the goal of establishing a new worldwide System of Real National Accounts.

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Citations
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A Contribution to the Empirics of Economic Growth

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ReportDOI

Economic Growth in a Cross Section of Countries

TL;DR: For 98 countries in the period 1960-1985, the growth rate of real per capita GDP is positively related to initial human capital (proxied by 1960 school-enrollment rates) and negatively related to the initial (1960) level as mentioned in this paper.
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Africa's Growth Tragedy: Policies and Ethnic Divisions

TL;DR: This article showed that ethnic diversity helps explain cross-country differences in public policies and other economic indicators in Sub-Saharan Africa, and that high ethnic fragmentation explains a significant part of most of these characteristics.
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A sensitivity analysis of cross-country growth regressions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors study whether the conclusions from existing studies are robust or fragile when small changes in the list of independent variables occur, and they find that although "policy"appears to be importantly related to growth, there is no strong independent relationship between growth and almost every existing policy indicator.
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Government spending in a simple model of endogenous growth

TL;DR: This article extended these models to include tax- financed government services that affect production or utility, and showed that growth and saving rates fall with an increase in utility-type expenditures; the two rates rise initially with productive government expenditures but subsequently decline.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Improved international comparisons of real product and its composition: 1950–1980

TL;DR: In this article, a set of international comparisons is developed for 124 countries over the three post World War II decades, 1950-80, and a Data Table is presented which gives, for most countries and most years, real product estimates for three different national income concepts and for the major subaggregates consumption, investment and government.
Journal ArticleDOI

A System of international comparisons of gross product and purchasing power

TL;DR: The United Nations International Comparison Project (UNICOMP) as mentioned in this paper was the first attempt to provide an international comparison of production, consumption, and investment data for the analysis of economic and social development.
Journal ArticleDOI

International comparisons of real product and its composition: 1950–77

TL;DR: In this article, structural relationships estimated from data obtained in a benchmark study of the expenditures and prices of 16 countries were used to develop a table of real gross domestic product and shares of gross domestic products devoted to private and public consumption and investment for each of over 100 countries in the years 1950 and 1960 through 1977.