Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Catch-up, convergence and the sources of post-war European growth: introduction and overview
- 2 Macroeconomic accounts for European countries
- 3 Sectoral growth accounting and structural change in post-war Europe
- 4 Measures of fixed capital stocks in the post-war period: a five-country study
- 5 Technology indicators and economic growth in the European area: some empirical evidence
- 6 Human capital and productivity in manufacturing during the twentieth century: Britain, Germany and the United States
- 7 Convergence and divergence in the European periphery: productivity in Eastern and Southern Europe in retrospect
- 8 Convergence: what the historical record shows
- 9 Growth and convergence in OECD countries: a closer look
- 10 On the historical continuity of the process of economic growth
- 11 Europe's Golden Age: an econometric investigation of changing trend rates of growth
- Index
2 - Macroeconomic accounts for European countries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Catch-up, convergence and the sources of post-war European growth: introduction and overview
- 2 Macroeconomic accounts for European countries
- 3 Sectoral growth accounting and structural change in post-war Europe
- 4 Measures of fixed capital stocks in the post-war period: a five-country study
- 5 Technology indicators and economic growth in the European area: some empirical evidence
- 6 Human capital and productivity in manufacturing during the twentieth century: Britain, Germany and the United States
- 7 Convergence and divergence in the European periphery: productivity in Eastern and Southern Europe in retrospect
- 8 Convergence: what the historical record shows
- 9 Growth and convergence in OECD countries: a closer look
- 10 On the historical continuity of the process of economic growth
- 11 Europe's Golden Age: an econometric investigation of changing trend rates of growth
- Index
Summary
In order to understand the nature of economic growth, and to analyse the reasons for differences in levels of performance over time and between countries, it is extremely useful to have a standardized set of accounts for the countries under comparison. They are of fundamental importance not only for growth accountancy of the type practised by Denison, but also for econometricians and others who use such magnitudes in regression analysis.
This chapter provides (Section 1) measures of the overall (GDP) growth rate in constant national prices; (Section 2) a set of PPP converters to put the national estimates into a comparable price framework; (Section 3) a set of integrated demographic, labour input and labour productivity measures – which show both levels and growth rates; (Section 4) measures of the quality of the labour force, in particular its educational level (human capital); (Section 5) internationally comparable estimates of the growth and level of the physical (non-residential) capital stock; (Section 6) an attempt to put the major causal influences into an explanatory framework of growth accounts.
This chapter assesses the quality of the evidence for ten European countries, and uses the information to analyse the performance of these economies. For comparative purposes, I have also included Japan and the USA. Japan is a major economy which started at a lower level than the European countries in 1950, but has since grown faster. The USA has been the world economic leader in the twentieth century, but since 1950 has grown more slowly than Europe and Japan which have moved much closer to US levels of performance.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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