Otsingu valikud
Avaleht Meedia Suunaviidad Uuringud & väljaanded Statistika Rahapoliitika Euro Maksed & turud Töövõimalused
Soovitused
Sorteeri
Ei ole eesti keeles kättesaadav

Daniel J. Wilson

1 July 2002
WORKING PAPER SERIES - No. 158
Details
Abstract
We estimate the rate of embodied technological change directly from plant-level manufacturing data on current output and input choices along with histories on their vintages of equipment investment. Our estimates range between 8 and 17 percent for the typical U.S. manufacturing plant during the years 1972-1996. Any number in this range is substantially larger than is conventionally accepted with some important implications. First, the role of investment-specific technological change as an engine of growth is even larger than previously estimated. Second, existing producer durable price indices do not adequately account for quality change. As a result, measured capital stock growth is biased. Third, if accurate, the Hulten and Wykoff (1981) economic depreciation rates may primarily reflect obsolescence.
JEL Code
O3 : Economic Development, Technological Change, and Growth→Technological Change, Research and Development, Intellectual Property Rights
D24 : Microeconomics→Production and Organizations→Production, Cost, Capital, Capital, Total Factor, and Multifactor Productivity, Capacity
L60 : Industrial Organization→Industry Studies: Manufacturing→General

Meie veebilehel kasutatakse küpsiseid

Kasutame tehnilisi küpsiseid kasutajaeelistuste salvestamiseks, analüütilisi küpsiseid veebilehe toimimise parandamiseks ning kolmandate osapoolte küpsiseid, mille on kindlaks määranud veebilehele integreeritud kolmandate isikute teenused.

Teil on võimalus anda küpsiste kasutamiseks nõusolek või sellest keelduda. Täiendava teabe saamiseks ning kasutatavate küpsiste ja logiteabega seotud eelistuste uuendamiseks palume tutvuda järgmiste dokumentidega:

Isikuandmete kaitse põhimõtteid

Küpsiste kasutamine