Abstract

Output per worker varies enormously across countries. Why? On an accounting basis our analysis shows that differences in physical capital and educational attainment can only partially explain the variation in output per worker—we find a large amount of variation in the level of the Solow residual across countries. At a deeper level, we document that the differences in capital accumulation, productivity, and therefore output per worker are driven by differences in institutions and government policies, which we call social infrastructure. We treat social infrastructure as endogenous, determined historically by location and other factors captured in part by language.

Keywords

ProductivityEconomicsSolow residualVariation (astronomy)Educational attainmentGovernment (linguistics)Labour economicsCapital (architecture)Social capitalHuman capitalDemographic economicsGrowth accountingPublic economicsTotal factor productivityMacroeconomicsEconomic growth

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Publication Info

Year
1999
Type
article
Volume
114
Issue
1
Pages
83-116
Citations
7794
Access
Closed

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Robert E. Hall, C. I. Jones (1999). Why do Some Countries Produce So Much More Output Per Worker than Others?. The Quarterly Journal of Economics , 114 (1) , 83-116. https://doi.org/10.1162/003355399555954

Identifiers

DOI
10.1162/003355399555954