Essays on Productivity, Technology, and Economic Fluctuations


Book Description

Technological progress is one of the main driving forces behind economic growth but how it affects the economy initially is not well understood. This dissertation contains three chapters that examine technological progress and productivity from different angles. They are all motivated by the need for better understanding the economic fluctuations that are observed in the data.










Productivity, Technology and Economic Growth


Book Description

Productivity, Technology and Economic Growth presents a selection of recent research advances on long term economic growth. While the contributions stem from both economic history, macro- and microeconomics and the economics of innovation, all papers depart from a common viewpoint: the key factor behind long term growth is productivity, and the latter is primarily driven by technological change. Most contributions show implicitly or explicitly that technological change is at least partly dependent on growth itself. Furthermore, technology appears to interact strongly with investment in physical and human capital as well as with changes in historical, political and institutional settings. Together these papers are an up-to-date account of the remarkable convergence in theoretical and empirical work on productivity and growth over the past decades. The first part deals with the characteristics of growth regimes over longer periods, ranging from 20 years to two centuries. The next four chapters study the determinants of productivity growth and, in some cases, productivity slowdown during the last quarter of the twentieth century. The final five chapters focus on the role of technology and innovation as the key determinants of growth. Productivity, Technology and Economic Growth is, therefore, a welcome collection for academic scholars and graduate students in economics, history and related social sciences as well as for policy makers.




Essays on Innovation, Productivity, and Talent Allocation


Book Description

This thesis contains three essays on innovation, productivity, and talent allocation. The first essay explores a novel channel through which short-term economic fluctuations affect the long-term innovative output of the economy: innovators' accumulation of human capital. Using a newly constructed data set on the patenting history of all individuals obtaining a bachelor's degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) between 1980 and 2005, I find that cohorts graduating during booms produce significantly fewer patents over the subsequent two decades. Initial economic conditions do not affect inventors' long-term occupational affiliation, suggesting that the main differences lie in their long-term level of inventive human capital. The decrease in patent output of cohorts graduating during booms is mainly from inventors with relatively low GPAs, and marginal patents receive fewer citations than the rest. The second essay uses the 2008 financial crisis as a natural experiment to study the characteristics of recent graduates from MIT bachelor programs who pursued a career in finance immediately after graduation. I find that finance competes against science and engineering graduate programs for the best talent from MIT but values academic skills less. As a result of endogenous skill development during college, financiers have significantly lower academic skills than students entering graduate school at graduation, despite having similar levels of raw academic talent measured at college entrance. Marginal financiers have lower starting salaries than average financiers, suggesting that there is positive selection into finance. The third essay examines the asset accumulation and labor force participation of Social Security Disability Insurance applicants. Using the RAND Health and Retirement Study panel data, I provide empirical support for the theory that an imperfectly screened disability insurance program encourages individuals who dislike work to save more in the present and plan to apply for disability insurance in the future, regardless of their future health. Despite exhibiting lower labor force attachment and earning less than accepted applicants, rejected applicants have significantly more assets immediately prior to their application, but not in the several years before. Although imperfect, the current screening differentiates the applicants in meaningful ways without using assets as an additional criterion.










Essays on Regional and Firm-level Productivity, Military Spending, and Technology


Book Description

The aggregate response of labor productivity to changes in technology and government spending has been analyzed and documented by many economists. However, much less is known about the response of regional and firm-level labor productivity. Therefore, the first chapter of this dissertation examines the regional effect of an aggregate technology shock. The second and third chapters use firm-level and regional data to explore how labor productivity and technology react to changes in government spending through military contracting. These regional and firm-level responses can help to increase our understanding of aggregate economic fluctuations. Chapter 1 of this dissertation estimates the response of state-level labor productivity to a technology shock as measured by aggregate utility patent applications. The state-level responses, estimated with a vector autoregression, have considerable spatial variation. In some states, the responses are significantly positive shortly after the shock. However, in other states the productivity responses are initially negative followed by an eventual positive response. To explain why the U.S. states respond differently, the responses are regressed against a variety of state-level demographic, economic, and policy factors. These cross-sectional regression results indicate that high-skilled labor, density, and industrial specialization are important shortly after a technology shock. Chapter 2, which is co-authored with Lone E. Christiansen, examines whether changes in government spending, through military prime contract awards, leads to the development of new technology and analyzes the effects on firm-level productivity. Though it is most often assumed that government spending does not affect technological progress, the results from this chapter show that indeed firm-level patenting, a proxy for technology, increases in response to a military contract award. Firm-level sales per employed worker, and research and development are also shown to respond positively. Chapter 3, co-authored with Lone E. Christiansen, follows the approach in Chapter 2 but examines the effects of military prime contracts at the regional level. The analysis shows that at the regional level, military prime contracts lead to the development of new technology. However, labor productivity at the regional level is only affected insignificantly.




The Diminishing Returns of Technology


Book Description

Monograph on the internal limits and trends of economic growth deriving from the diminishing investment returns of technology - following an outline of historical links between economic growth and technological change (esp. In times of economic recession), examines the production function and other aspects of economic theory (incl. Productivity and efficiency) regarding innovations in technology, and includes considerations on the future of postindustrial society. Bibliography after each chapter, diagrams, graphs and statistical tables.