The Productivity Paradox - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 37
About This Presentation
Title:

The Productivity Paradox

Description:

Cars now have airbags, better emissions, antilock brakes... BLS figures uses strict dollar amounts Excuses Too early to tell [Oliner and Sichel, 2000] ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:62
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 38
Provided by: MarkN168
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Productivity Paradox


1
The Productivity Paradox
  • Erol Taymaz
  • ECON 448

2
The Paradox
  • We Love Computers
  • Computers (Seem To) Hamper Productivity we see
    computers everywhere but in the productivity
    statistics. (Solow-paradox)

3
The Paradox
ICT investment
TFP growth
4
Evidence of a Problem
  • Productivity Growth Slump, 1973 - present

5
Evidence of a Problem (part 2)
Value Added
  • Productivity
  • Downturn in Productivity Growth, not Productivity

Person-Hour Employed
6
Evidence of a Problem (part 3)
  • Massive Expenditures in Information Technology
  • 43 of capital budgets on hardware alone
  • Has Replaced Other Forms of Capital Investment
  • but hasnt performed as well
  • some studies show a zero return on investment for
    IT, vs. 13 for traditional investments

7
Why (not)?
  • Service Industries Output Hard to Quantify
  • Banking labor output labor input
  • Baily and Gordon attempted to correct for poor
    measurements, could only raise growth 0.2
  • Unmeasured Value
  • What if lots of value added with no dollar
    increase?
  • Cars now have airbags, better emissions, antilock
    brakes...
  • BLS figures uses strict dollar amounts

8
Excuses
  • Too early to tell Oliner and Sichel, 2000
  • Computer Hardware is only 2-5 of capital stock
  • Technology still immature
  • Insufficiently trained workforce
  • Major innovations (PCs, the Internet, etc) have
    been generated since the mid 1990s

9
Other Explanations
  • What we observe is substitution of IT for non-IT,
    there is no technical change Jorgenson and Yip,
    2001
  • It is not a great innovation (compared to the
    early 20th century) Gordon, 2000

10
Technical Change in IT
11
Technical Change in IT
12
ITs Share in Output Growth
13
ITs Share in Output Growth
14
ITs Share in Capital Input
15
ITs Share in Capital Input
16
Sources of US Growth
17
Sources of US Growth
18
Sources of Growth in DCs
19
Substitution of IT for non-IT
20
Growth Accounting
  • Oliner and Sichel (2000)
  • Growth accounting
  • dY acdKc asdKs amdKm aodKo
  • aL(dL dq) MFP

21
(No Transcript)
22
(No Transcript)
23
Growth Accounting
  • A sharp increase in MFP
  • IT capital plays an important role both its use
    and production
  • The impact will stay relatively strong for at
    least the next few years
  • Its share increased, so does its effect

24
  • Does the New Economy Measure up to the Great
    Inventions of the Past?
  • Gordon (2000)

25
A New Growth Accounting
26
Structural Acceleration in MFP
27
Structural Acceleration in MFP
  • The New Economy does not reach to other, non-IT
    sectors, that produce 80 of output.
  • 1995-1999 is too short. The MFP growth may
    reflect cyclical effects.

28
Questions?
  • Why was growth so slow after 1972?
  • Why was growth so fast during the Golden Years
    1913-1972?

29
The Great Inventions of the 2nd IR
  • Electricity
  • Electric light and electric motor
  • Electric chair
  • EM revolutionized manufacturing
  • New consumer goods
  • Air conditioning

30
The Great Inventions of the 2nd IR
  • Internal combustion engine made possible personal
    autos
  • ICE led to
  • Suburbs
  • Highways
  • Supermarkets
  • No rural isolation

31
The Great Inventions of the 2nd IR
  • Chemicals, plastics, and pharmaceuticals
  • New materials
  • Longer life expectancy
  • 1900-1950, increased by 0.72 per year
  • 1950-1995, increased by 0.24 per year

32
The Great Inventions of the 2nd IR
  • Entertainment, communication and information
  • Telegraph (1844)
  • Telephone (1876)
  • Phonograph (1877)
  • Popular photography (1880s)
  • Radio (1899)
  • Motion pictures (1880s)
  • TV (1911)

33
The Great Inventions of the 2nd IR
  • Urban infrastructure
  • Running water
  • Indoor plumbing
  • Urban sanitation

34
The Great Inventions of the 2nd IR
  • Would you like to live in a house without a flush
    toilet or the Internet?

35
What about the future?
  • Do we expect an increase in MFP as a result of
    the diffusion of the New Economy, the Internet,
    etc?
  • No!

36
Why not?
  • Diminishing returns...
  • We already received most of the benefits of
    these innovations.

37
Then, why firms invest in IT?
  • Market share protection (Barnes and Noble vs
    Amazon a zero-sum game)
  • Recreation of old activities rather than creation
    of new activities (much internet content...)
  • Duplication
  • Use of business computers for consumption
    purposes
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com