Why is Europe Falling Behind? Structural Transformation and Services' Productivity Differences between Europe and the U.S.
Abstract
We explain labor productivity differences of the service sector between Europe and the U.S. through the labor allocation taking place within the service sector. We measure labor productivity using a multisector structural... [ view full abstract ]
We explain labor productivity differences of the service sector between Europe and the U.S. through the labor allocation taking place within the service sector. We measure labor productivity using a multisector structural transformation model that decomposes services into 11 sub-sectors comparable across Europe and the U.S. We identify wholesale and retail trade as well as business services to be the two sectors responsible for most of the lack of catch-up in labor productivity between Europe and the U.S. We also investigate which institutional characteristics are associated with the different performances of sectoral productivity across sectors. We empirically explore our country-sector panel measures of labor productivity levels, and our results suggest that differences in taxation, pro-business attitudes, ICT diffusion and rates of innovation are disproportionally correlated with the productivity of wholesale, retail and business services relative to the rest of the sectors in the economy.
Authors
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Cesare Buiatti
(University of Illinois)
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Joao Duarte
(University of Cambridge)
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Luis Felipe Sáenz
(University of Illinois)
Topic Areas
O. Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth: O4. Economic Growth , O. Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth: O5. Economywide Cou
Session
CS5-15 » Labor 8 (14:00 - Saturday, 11th November, Room 15)
Paper
Buiatti_Duarte_Saenz_2017.pdf
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