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Recent trends and structural breaks in the US and EU15 labour productivity growth

Laure Turner and Herve Boulhol

Applied Economics, 2011, vol. 43, issue 30, 4769-4784

Abstract: This article examines shifts in labour productivity growth in the US and in Europe between 1970 and 2007 based on econometric tests of structural breaks. Additionally, it makes use of time-series-based projections of labour productivity growth up to 2009 in order to detect breaks depending on confidence intervals of the projections. The identification of structural breaks in the US labour productivity growth is far from obvious. A statistically significant break is found in the late 1990s only if at least the 97.5th percentile of forecasts materializes in the future, which means that despite a clear pick up in productivity growth in the second half of the 1990s, the size of the hump is not large enough compared with past variations to make this change a statistically significant break. However, a significant break point is detected in the mid-1990s for the difference in labour productivity growth between the US and the EU15, even when controlling for the convergence of Europe towards the US productivity levels that has contributed to higher European performance in the early catch up phase. Finally, within Europe, the accumulation of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) capital seems to be related to differences in the shifts in structural labour productivity growth across countries.

Date: 2011
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Working Paper: Recent trends and structural breaks in US and EU15 labour productivity growth (2010) Downloads
Working Paper: Recent Trends and Structural Breaks in US and EU15 Labour Productivity Growth (2008) Downloads
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DOI: 10.1080/00036846.2010.498356

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