The UK productivity puzzle, 2008–2012: evidence using plant-level estimates of total factor productivity

This paper presents new information from plant-level data on the UK's productivity performance since 2008 and considers whether a fall in the capital-labour ratio explains the UK's productivity puzzle. The results show that, while both manufacturing and services experienced large declines...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oxford economic papers 2017-07, Vol.69 (3), p.529-549
Hauptverfasser: Harris, Richard, Moffat, John
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description This paper presents new information from plant-level data on the UK's productivity performance since 2008 and considers whether a fall in the capital-labour ratio explains the UK's productivity puzzle. The results show that, while both manufacturing and services experienced large declines in labour productivity post-2008, the UK's poor TFP productivity performance is primarily a service sector and small-plant phenomenon. Most of the fall in TFP in services is accounted for by a large negative TFP shock in 2008–2012. By decomposing the change in average labour productivity, it is shown that declines in the intermediate inputs-labour (rather than the capital–labour) ratio and decreases in TFP were responsible for the fall in labour productivity.
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source JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current)
subjects Capital ratios
Economic growth
Manufacturing
Organizational behavior
Productivity
Service industries
Studies
title The UK productivity puzzle, 2008–2012: evidence using plant-level estimates of total factor productivity
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