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“Changing Gear” Productivity, ICT and Service Industries: Europe and the United States Bart van Ark Robert Inklaar Robert H. McGuckin 17 May 2002 University.

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Presentation on theme: "“Changing Gear” Productivity, ICT and Service Industries: Europe and the United States Bart van Ark Robert Inklaar Robert H. McGuckin 17 May 2002 University."— Presentation transcript:

1 “Changing Gear” Productivity, ICT and Service Industries: Europe and the United States Bart van Ark Robert Inklaar Robert H. McGuckin 17 May 2002 University of Groningen

2 Earlier Work on International Comparisons of Productivity and ICT  Macro-level growth accounting:  ICT investment intensity in Europe is increasing but at slower rate than in US  LP and TFP growth in Europe is falling behind US since 1995 and gap is widening  Industry-level productivity comparisons:  ICT production is less important as contributor to growth in Europe  Diffusion to ICT-using industries does not lead to much acceleration in productivity growth

3 What’s new in this paper?  Update and extension of 50-industry database on labor productivity for 14 OECD countries  Examine differences across ICT-producing, ICT-using and “non-ICT” industries using various techniques (shift share, econometric analysis)  First investigation into cross-country differences in industry patterns of ICT-use on basis of I(C)T-intensities

4 Main findings  ICT-producing industries show rapid acceleration in productivity growth in both Europe and U.S., but contribution is higher in U.S. due to larger size  ICT-producing services (telecommunication, computer services) perform relatively well in many European countries  ICT-using services perform significantly different from non- ICT services in both Europe and U.S...  … but only U.S. shows rapid acceleration in ICT-using services overall, and wholesale & retail trade and securities play the key role

5 Focus of this presentation is on services !  ICT-use is highest in service industries in U.S. and Europe  Data problems cloud international comparisons, but some improvements are and still can be made  ICT-using services are key to understanding opening up of U.S.-EU gap in productivity growth  Within ICT-using services and non-ICT services variation across industries is huge …  … but story points consistently to U.S. advantage being biggest in limited number of service industries (trade, securities)

6 US ICT share in capital services defines technological opportunity set for other countries

7

8 Service industries are among the top industries in terms of ICT intensity

9 Data issues  Main source: OECD STAN database on national accounts, based on ISIC rev. 3  Additional breakdown for ICT-producing industries and several service industries (e.g., trade and business services)  Application of US hedonic price indices for ICT production to European series improves comparability  Measurement of output in service industries is problematic across countries …  … but there is no evidence of systematic biases between countries

10 Data issues  Main source: OECD STAN database on national accounts, based on ISIC rev. 3  Additional breakdown for ICT-producing industries and several service industries (e.g., trade and business services)  Application of US hedonic price indices for ICT production to European series improves comparability  Measurement of output in service industries is problematic across countries …  … but there is no evidence of systematic biases between countries

11 ICT-using services is main source of difference between U.S. and European growth performance since 1995

12 But productivity growth in ICT-services is significantly different from non-ICT services in many countries

13 Aggregate productivity growth differential between U.S. and EU (0.8 %-points) since 1995 is dominated by productivity growth differential in trade and securities

14 … with offsetting effects mainly from non-ICT services

15 The “lagging diffusion” hypothesis for EU is supported by strong correlation between U.S. productivity growth (1990-95) and EU growth (1995-2000)


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