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"International trade economists typically assume that there are no cross-country differences in industry total factor productivity (TFP). In contrast, this paper finds large and persistent TFP differences across a group of industrialized countries in the 1980s. The paper calculates TFP indices, and statistically examines the sources of the observed large TFP differences across countries. Two hypotheses are examined to account for TFP differences: constant returns to scale production with country-specific technological differences, and industry-level scale economies with identical technology in each country. The data support the constant returns/different technology hypothesis over the increasing returns/same technology hypothesis"--Federal Reserve Bank of New York web site.
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1
Estimation of cross-country differences in industry production functions
1998, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
in English
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2
Estimation of cross-country differences in industry production functions
1998, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Electronic resource
in English
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3
Estimation of cross-country differences in industry production functions
1997, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
in English
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Estimation of cross-country differences in industry production functions
1997, National Bureau of Economic Research
in English
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Book Details
Edition Notes
"August 1997."
JEL no. F1, D24.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 28-31).
Electronic access limited to Binghamton University faculty, staff and students for instructional and research purposes only.
Electronic version available via the Internet at the NBER World Wide Web site.
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