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Why is Labor Productivity in Israel so Low?

Moshe Hazan and Shay Tsur ()

No 14011, CEPR Discussion Papers from C.E.P.R. Discussion Papers

Abstract: We analyze differences in labor productivity between Israel and a group of small OECD countries. We assume a more general human capital production function and calibrate it using PIAAC surveys, which examine the literacy and numeracy skills of the adult population in the OECD countries. Whereas Israel has more years of schooling, its population has lower measured skills. Using development accounting exercise, we show that once years of schooling and numeracy skills are taken into account, differences in accumulated factors explain more than three-quarters of the gap. This is against a split of 60-40 between accumulated factors and total factor productivity, when these skills are ignored. Additionally, using panel data on 13 OECD countries we show strong positive correlation between physical and human capital per worker at the industry level. A causal interpretation of our estimates implies that closing the gap in skills will indirectly close 18 percent of the gap in physical capital.

Keywords: Development accounting; Labor productivity; Piaac; Human capital; Physical capital (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019-09
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ara and nep-eff
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