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Intangible capital and u.s. economic growth

TLDR
In this paper, the authors add intangible capital to the standard sources-of-growth framework used by the BLS, and find that the inclusion of our list of intangible assets makes a significant difference in the observed patterns of U.S. economic growth.
Abstract
Published macroeconomic data traditionally exclude most intangible investment from measured GDP. This situation is beginning to change, but our estimates suggest that as much as $800 billion is still excluded from U.S. published data (as of 2003), and that this leads to the exclusion of more than $3 trillion of business intangible capital stock. To assess the importance of this omission, we add intangible capital to the standard sources-of-growth framework used by the BLS, and find that the inclusion of our list of intangible assets makes a significant difference in the observed patterns of U.S. economic growth. The rate of change of output per worker increases more rapidly when intangibles are counted as capital, and capital deepening becomes the unambiguously dominant source of growth in labor productivity. The role of multifactor productivity is correspondingly diminished, and labor's income share is found to have decreased significantly over the last 50 years.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A Retrospective Look at the U.S. Productivity Growth Resurgence

TL;DR: In this article, the authors trace the evolution of productivity estimates to document how and when this perception emerged, concluding that early studies concluded that information technology was relatively unimportant and only after the massive information technology investment boom of the late 1990s did this investment and underlying productivity increases in the information technology producing sectors come to be identified as important sources of growth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intangible Capital and the Investment-q Relation

TL;DR: In this article, the Tobin's q is used to explain both physical and intangible investment, and the authors show that it is a better proxy for both physical investment and intangible capital.
ReportDOI

Measuring the Returns to R&D

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the econometric literature on measuring the returns to R&D and provide a series of tables summarizing the major results that have been obtained and conclude with a presentation of r&D spillover returns measurement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intangible capital and the investment-q relation

TL;DR: This paper showed that Tobin's q explains physical and intangible investment roughly equally well, and it explains total investment even better than physical investment at the firm level, compared with physical capital, which adjusts more slowly to changes in investment opportunities.
Journal ArticleDOI

How Do You Measure a "Technological Revolution"?

TL;DR: The received theory of economic growth is the natural candidate for this job It came of age in the 1950s and 1960s with the neoclassi cal models and emergence of aggregate growth accounting and has become the work horse of empirical macroeconomic growth analysis and the basis for official productivity statistics put out by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) since 1983 as mentioned in this paper.
References
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The mechanics of economic development

Abstract: This paper considers the prospects for constructing a neoclassical theory of growth and international trade that is consistent with some of the main features of economic development. Three models are considered and compared to evidence: a model emphasizing physical capital accumulation and technological change, a model emphasizing human capital accumulation through schooling, and a model emphasizing specialized human capital accumulation through learning-by-doing.
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Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a fully specified model of long-run growth in which knowledge is assumed to be an input in production that has increasing marginal productivity, which is essentially a competitive equilibrium model with endogenous technological change.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the mechanics of economic development

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider the prospects for constructing a neoclassical theory of growth and international trade that is consistent with some of the main features of economic development, and compare three models and compared to evidence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Technical change and the aggregate production function

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a method to improve the performance of the system by using the information of the user's interaction with the system and the system itself, including the interaction between the two parties.
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