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Science and Technology Law Commons

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Faculty Scholarship

Labor and Employment Law

2009

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Accounting For Productivity Growth When Technical Change Is Biased, James Bessen Jan 2009

Accounting For Productivity Growth When Technical Change Is Biased, James Bessen

Faculty Scholarship

Solow (1957) decomposed labor productivity growth into two components that are independent under Hicks neutrality: input growth and the residual, representing technical change. However, when technical change is Hicks biased, input growth is no longer independent of technical change, leading to ambiguous interpretation. Using Solow's model, I decompose output per worker into globally independent sources and show that technical bias directly contributes to labor productivity growth above what is captured in the Solow residual. This contribution is sometimes large, generating rates of total technical change that substantially exceed the Solow residual, prompting a reinterpretation of some well-known studies.