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The Growth of ICT and Industry Performance - Manufacturing in the US and UK Compared
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 March 2020
Abstract
UK manufacturing productivity has for a long time lagged behind the US. Explanations put forward for the ‘productivity gap’ include disparities in capital stock levels, the quality of the labour force and different rates of technology adoption. The questions addressed in this paper are, ‘has slower UK up-take of information technology exacerbated the productivity gap? Can this account for the slowdown in the manufacturing sector in the mid-1990s, a period when the US experienced substantial growth?’ Using the growth accounting method and industry data for the period 1988-2000, the paper indicates considerable industry heterogeneity in both the UK and the US, which aggregate sectoral analysis is likely to obscure. The results suggest that whilst the UK continues to lag behind the US in terms of ICT capital shares, differences in rates of growth of ICT capital are minor. Labour quality indicators show positive ICT and non-ICT skilled labour growth and declines in lower skilled categories in both countries, with the UK leading the US in recent years. Thus UK manufacturing has invested significantly in new technology inputs. The paper also shows there are similarities in the cross industry patterns of productivity performance in the two countries but growth rates in the UK are significantly below those in the US across the board. The paper then considers alternative explanations for the slowdown in UK manufacturing productivity in the mid to late 1990s and suggests this may be due to macroeconomic factors peculiar to that period and lags in the adjustments of firms to a changed environment.
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- Copyright © 2003 National Institute of Economic and Social Research
Footnotes
This work has been jointly funded by a DTI/DfES/Treasury project under the Evidence Based Policy Fund and the European Commission fifth framework grant: Employment prospects in the Knowledge Economy whose support is gratefully acknowledged. It draws on joint work with NIESR colleagues, John Forth, Geoff Mason and Michela Vecchi. A preliminary version of this paper was given at a conference on The Future of Manufacturing, London School of Economics, 1 November 2002.
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