Accounting for Growth in the Information Age

The "killer application" of the new framework for productivity measurement presented in this paper is the impact of information technology (IT) on economic growth. A consensus has emerged that the remarkable behavior of IT prices provides the key to the surge in U.S. economic growth after 1995. The relentless decline in the prices of information technology equipment and software has steadily enhanced the role of IT investment. Productivity growth in IT-producing industries has risen in importance and a productivity revival is underway in the rest of the economy.The surge of IT investment in the United States after 1995 has counterparts in all other industrialized countries. It is essential to use comparable data and methodology in order to provide rigorous international comparisons. A crucial role is played by measurements of IT prices. The U.S. national accounts have incorporated measures of IT prices that hold performance constant since 1985. Schreyer [Schreyer, Paul (2000), "The contribution of information and communication technology to output growth: A study of the G7 Countries". Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, Paris, May 23] has extended these measures to other industrialized countries by constructing "internationally harmonized prices".The acceleration in the IT price decline in 1995 triggered a burst of IT investment in all of the G7 nations - Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK, as well as the U.S. These countries also experienced a rise in productivity growth in the IT-producing industries. However, differences in the relative importance of these industries have generated wide disparities in the impact of IT on economic growth. The role of the IT-producing industries is greatest in the U.S., which leads the G7 in output per capita.

[1]  Kevin J. Stiroh,et al.  Computers, Productivity, and Input Substitution , 1998 .

[2]  Danny Quah,et al.  The New Empirics of Economic Growth , 1998 .

[3]  D. Jorgenson,et al.  Relative productivity levels, 1947–1973: An international comparison , 1981 .

[4]  R. Harrod,et al.  AN ESSAY IN DYNAMIC THEORY , 1939 .

[5]  D. Jorgenson,et al.  Information Technology and Growth , 1999 .

[6]  Michael T. Kiley,et al.  Computers and Growth with Costs of Adjustment: Will the Future Look Like the Past? , 1999 .

[7]  G.E. Moore,et al.  Cramming More Components Onto Integrated Circuits , 1998, Proceedings of the IEEE.

[8]  Walter Diewert,et al.  Exact and superlative index numbers , 1976 .

[9]  S. Wadhwani,et al.  Do We Have a New Economy? , 2005 .

[10]  R. Hall The Stock Market and Capital Accumulation , 1999 .

[11]  Lauren Belfer,et al.  CITY OF LIGHT , 2010, Paris from the Ground Up.

[12]  Robert J. Gordon,et al.  The measurement of durable goods prices , 1991 .

[13]  Charles R. Hulten Total Factor Productivity: A Short Biography , 2000 .

[14]  D. Lawrence PROGRESS IN MEASURING THE PRICE AND QUANTITY OF CAPITAL , 1999 .

[15]  R. Hall E-Capital: The Link between the Stock Market and the Labor Market in the 1990s , 2000 .

[16]  Z. Griliches Productivity, R&D, and the Data Constraint , 1998 .

[17]  Robert M. Solow,et al.  Growth Theory and After , 1987 .

[18]  George J. Stigler,et al.  Trends in Output and Employment , 1948 .

[19]  A. Maddison,et al.  Phases of capitalist development , 1983 .

[20]  R. Solow A Contribution to the Theory of Economic Growth , 1956 .

[21]  D. Jorgenson The Economic Theory of Replacement and Depreciation , 1974 .

[22]  J. Triplett The Solow productivity paradox: what do computers do to productivity? , 1999 .

[23]  Paul A. Samuelson,et al.  The Evaluation of ‘Social Income’: Capital Formation and Wealth , 1961 .

[24]  Michael J. Harper,et al.  Possible Measurement Bias in Aggregate Productivity Growth , 1999 .

[25]  Fellow,et al.  The New Economy: Post Mortem or Second Wind? , 2002 .

[26]  John W. Kendrick,et al.  Productivity Trends in the United States. , 1962 .

[27]  Dale W. Jorgenson,et al.  Computers And Growth , 1995 .

[28]  Dale W. Jorgenson,et al.  Lifting the burden : tax reform, the cost of capital, and U.S. economic growth , 2001 .

[29]  Stephen D. Oliner,et al.  Computers and Output Growth Revisited: How Big Is the Puzzle? , 1994 .

[30]  Clayton M. Christensen The Innovator's Dilemma , 1997 .

[31]  R. Hall,et al.  Digital Dealing: How E-Markets Are Transforming the Economy , 2001 .

[32]  Robert M. Solow,et al.  Neoclassical growth theory , 1999 .

[33]  S. Karlin,et al.  Mathematical Methods in the Social Sciences , 1962 .

[34]  Robert M. Solow,et al.  Growth Theory: An Exposition , 1971 .

[35]  Manuel Trajtenberg,et al.  Diffusion of General Purpose Technologies , 1996 .

[36]  Dale W. Jorgenson,et al.  International Comparisons of the Sources of Economic Growth , 1996 .

[37]  R. Shiller,et al.  Valuation Ratios and the Long-Run Stock Market Outlook , 1998 .

[38]  Z. Griliches,et al.  The Explanation of Productivity Change , 1967 .

[39]  Roy Thurik,et al.  Erim Report Series Research in Management What's New about the New Economy? Sources of Growth in the Managed and Entrepreneurial Economies Bibliographic Data and Classifications , 2022 .

[40]  A. Colecchia,et al.  ICT Investment and Economic Growth in the 1990s: Is the United States a Unique Case? A Comparative Study of Nine OECD Countries , 2002 .

[41]  Peter J. Klenow,et al.  Learning-by-Doing Spillovers in the Semiconductor Industry , 1994, Journal of Political Economy.

[42]  D. Jorgenson,et al.  Whatever Happened to Productivity Growth , 2001 .

[43]  R. Summers,et al.  Improved International Comparisons Of Real Product And Its Composition: 1950–1980 , 1984 .

[44]  J. Kendrick,et al.  Productivity in the United States: trends and cycles , 1981 .

[45]  M. Abramovitz Catching Up, Forging Ahead, and Falling Behind , 1986, The Journal of Economic History.

[46]  D. Weil,et al.  A Contribution to the Empirics of Economic Growth Author ( s ) : , 2008 .

[47]  Dale W. Jorgenson,et al.  Productivity and U.S. Economic Growth , 1999 .

[48]  The National Wealth of the United States in the Postwar Period. , 1963 .

[49]  K. Stiroh Information Technology and the U.S. Productivity Revival: What Do the Industry Data Say? , 2001 .

[50]  Erik Brynjolfsson,et al.  Technological Change, Computerization, and the Wage Structure , 2000 .

[51]  S. Engerman,et al.  The Cambridge Economic History of the United States , 2000 .

[52]  D. Acemoglu Technical Change, Inequality, and the Labor Market , 2000 .

[53]  Moses Abramovitz,et al.  Resources and Output Trends in the United States since 1870. , 1957 .

[54]  P. Schreyer The Contribution of Information and Communication Technology to Output Growth: A Study of the G7 Countries , 2000 .

[55]  E. Domar,et al.  ON THE MEASUREMENT OF TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE , 1961 .

[56]  Robert P. Parker,et al.  Recognition of Business and Government Expenditures for Software as Investment: Methodology and Quantitative Impacts, 1959-98 , 2000 .

[57]  Dale A. Stirling,et al.  Information rules , 2003, SGMD.

[58]  Per Krusell,et al.  Long-Run Implications of Investment-Specific Technological Change , 1995 .

[59]  C. Hulten The Measurement of Capital , 1991 .

[60]  Andrew B. Whinston,et al.  The Internet Economy: Technology and Practice , 2000 .

[61]  W. Baumol Productivity Growth, Convergence, and Welfare: What the Long-run Data Show , 1985 .

[62]  C. Corrado Industrial production and capacity utilization: the 2002 historical and annual revision , 2003 .

[63]  E. Domar,et al.  CAPITAL EXPANSION, RATE OF GROWTH AND EMPLOYMENT , 1946 .

[64]  G. Chamberlain Multivariate regression models for panel data , 1982 .

[65]  Robert E. Lucas,et al.  Studies in Business-Cycle Theory. , 1982 .

[66]  Kenneth Flamm Mismanaged Trade?: Strategic Policy and the Semiconductor Industry , 1996 .

[67]  Robert E. Lucas,et al.  Adjustment Costs and the Theory of Supply , 1967, Journal of Political Economy.

[68]  Dale W. Jorgenson,et al.  Productivity and Economic Growth , 1990 .

[69]  Paul M. Romer Crazy Explanations for the Productivity Slowdown , 1987, NBER Macroeconomics Annual.

[70]  E. F. Denison,et al.  Why Growth Rates Differ. , 1969 .

[71]  Robert Summers,et al.  A NEW SET OF INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS OF REAL PRODUCT AND PRICE LEVELS ESTIMATES FOR 130 COUNTRIES, 1950–1985 , 1988 .

[72]  Lawrence F. Katz,et al.  The High-Pressure U.S. Labor Market of the 1990s , 1999 .

[73]  Robert E. Hall,et al.  The Relation between Price and Marginal Cost in U.S. Industry , 1988, Journal of Political Economy.

[74]  The 'embodiment' controversy: A review essay , 1998 .

[75]  D. Jorgenson,et al.  Growth of US Industries and Investments in Information Technology and Higher Education , 2003 .

[76]  Andrew S. Grove,et al.  Only the Paranoid Survive: How to Exploit the Crisis Points that Challenge Every Company and Career , 1996 .

[77]  A. Maddison,et al.  Dynamic forces in capitalist development , 1991 .

[78]  Karl Whelan,et al.  Computers, Obsolescence, and Productivity , 2000, Review of Economics and Statistics.

[79]  I. Fisher,et al.  The making of index numbers , 1967 .

[80]  E. Brynjolfsson,et al.  Beyond Computation: Information Technology, Organizational Transformation and Business Performance , 2000 .

[81]  Richard Ruggles,et al.  System of national accounts, 1993 , 1995 .

[82]  M. King,et al.  INVESTMENT AND TECHNICAL PROGRESS , 1992 .

[83]  W. Diewert Aggregation Problems in the Measurement of Capital , 1980 .

[84]  A. Maddison GROWTH AND SLOWDOWN IN ADVANCED CAPITALIST ECONOMIES - TECHNIQUES OF QUANTITATIVE ASSESSMENT , 1987 .

[85]  Z. Griliches Measuring Inputs in Agriculture: A Critical Survey , 1960 .

[86]  Charles Petzold Code: The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software , 1999 .

[87]  D. Jorgenson Capital Theory and Investment Behavior , 1963 .

[88]  Paul M. Romer,et al.  The Origins of Endogenous Growth , 1994 .

[89]  Boyan Jovanovic,et al.  Accounting for Growth , 1998 .

[90]  Barbara M. Fraumeni,et al.  The Measurement of Depreciation in the U.S. National Income and Product Accounts , 1997 .

[91]  Andrea Roventini,et al.  Yeast vs. Mushrooms: A Note on Harberger's "A Vision of the Growth Process" , 2004 .

[92]  Nazrul Islam,et al.  What have We Learnt from the Convergence Debate , 2003 .

[93]  Dale W. Jorgenson,et al.  The Embodiment Hypothesis , 1966, Journal of Political Economy.

[94]  Erik Brynjolfsson,et al.  Information Technology and Productivity: A Review of the Literature , 1996, Adv. Comput..

[95]  S. Rebelo,et al.  Resuscitating Real Business Cycles , 2000 .

[96]  P. David,et al.  American Macroeconomic Growth in the Era of Knowledge-Based Progress: The Long-Run Perspective , 2000 .

[97]  Stephen D. Oliner,et al.  The Resurgence of Growth in the Late 1990s: Is Information Technology the Story? , 2000 .

[98]  M. Baily,et al.  The Productivity Slowdown, Measurement Issues, and the Explosion of Computer Power , 1989 .

[99]  R. Solow TECHNICAL CHANGE AND THE AGGREGATE PRODUCTION FUNCTION , 1957 .