Prices of High-Tech Products, Mismeasurement, and Pace of Innovation / David Byrne, Stephen Oliner, Daniel Sichel.
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- E01 - Measurement and Data on National Income and Product Accounts and Wealth • Environmental Accounts
- E22 - Investment • Capital • Intangible Capital • Capacity
- E24 - Employment • Unemployment • Wages • Intergenerational Income Distribution • Aggregate Human Capital • Aggregate Labor Productivity
- L63 - Microelectronics • Computers • Communications Equipment
- L86 - Information and Internet Services • Computer Software
- O3 - Innovation • Research and Development • Technological Change • Intellectual Property Rights
- O33 - Technological Change: Choices and Consequences • Diffusion Processes
- O4 - Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity
- O41 - One, Two, and Multisector Growth Models
- Hardcopy version available to institutional subscribers
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Working Paper | Biblioteca Digital | Colección NBER | nber w23369 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan |
April 2017.
Two recent papers have made compelling cases that mismeasurement of prices of high tech products cannot explain the slow pace of labor productivity growth that has prevailed since the mid-2000s. Does that result indicate that mismeasurement of high-tech products has limited implications for patterns of economic growth? The answer in this paper is "no." We demonstrate that the understatement of price declines for high-tech products in official measures has a dramatic effect on the pattern of MFP growth across sectors. In particular, we show that correcting this mismeasurement implies faster MFP growth in high-tech sectors and slower MFP advance outside the high-tech sector. If MFP growth is taken as a rough proxy for the pace of innovation, our results suggest that innovation in the tech sector has been more rapid than the rate that would be inferred from official statistics (and less rapid outside high-tech). These results deepen the productivity puzzle. If the pace of innovation in high-tech sectors has been more rapid than indicated by official statistics, then it is perhaps even more puzzling that overall labor productivity growth has been so sluggish in recent years.
Hardcopy version available to institutional subscribers
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