Is Zimbabwe More Productive Than the United States? Some Observations From PWT 8.1
Murat Üngör and
AyÅŸe Ä°mrohoroÄŸlu ()
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AyÅŸe Ä°mrohoroÄŸlu: University of Southern California, Los Angeles
Authors registered in the RePEc Author Service: Ayse Imrohoroglu
No 1606, Working Papers from University of Otago, Department of Economics
Abstract:
In Penn World Table (PWT) 8.1, several developing countries stand out as outliers with high total factor productivity (TFP) levels relative to the United States (U.S.). For example, in 2011, Zimbabwe and Trinidad and Tobago are reported to have 3 and 1.6 times higher TFP levels than the U.S., respectively. In addition, for several other countries, such as Turkey and Gabon, the stated levels of TFP are very similar to that of the U.S. level (1.01 and 1.11 times the U.S. levels, respectively). Estimates for some of these countries seem rather unlikely when compared with other measures of productivity (such as output per worker). While in the construction of TFP levels PWT does use country-speci_c factor shares we show that their results are very similar to calculating TFP levels with a Cobb-Douglas production function where capital and labor shares are assumed to be the same across all countries, i.e., using a constant labor share of 2/3 for all countries. A simple modi_cation, using a constant labor share of 2/3 for developed countries and 1/2 for developing countries, generates more \plausible" estimates for TFP levels.
Keywords: Total factor productivity; labor income shares; Penn Tables (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: O11 O40 O47 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 23 pages
Date: 2016-06, Revised 2016-06
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