Search results for "Capital Consumption Allowance"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Human capital in OECD countries: Technical change, efficiency and productivity

2003

The aim of this paper is to analyse the role of human capital in the productivity gains of the OECD countries in the period 1965-90, breaking down the productivity gains into technical change and gains in efficiency. For this purpose we use both a stochastic frontier approach and a non-parametric approach (DEA) and calculate Malmquist indices of productivity. The results obtained indicate the existence of both a level effect (a higher level of human capital raises labour productivity) and a rate effect (a higher level of human capital affects positively the rate of technical change) associated with human capital. The differences among countries in endowments of human capital have worked aga…

Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsPhysical capitalCapital deepeningEconomicsCapital employedCapital intensityCapital Consumption AllowanceFixed capitalProductivityTotal factor productivityInternational Review of Applied Economics
researchProduct

Endogenous Growth, Capital Utilization and Depreciation

2004

We study the one sector model of growth when a linear production technology is combined with adjustment costs and a technology for capital maintenance. Agents are allowed to under-use the installed capital and to vary the depreciation rate. This economy decides endogenously how much resources devotes to the accumulation of new capital and how much to maintenance and repair activities. We find as striking results that the long-run depreciation and capital utilization rates are positively related to the population growth rate, and that both depend negatively on the intial conditions. The long-run growth rate appears positively correlated with the depreciation rate.

Labour economicsEndogenous growth theoryDepreciationCapital deepeningCapital (economics)EconomicsPopulation growthProduction (economics)Capital Consumption AllowanceConsumption of fixed capitalSSRN Electronic Journal
researchProduct

Throwing the Spanner in the Works: The Mixed Blessing of FDI

2014

FDI is generally attributed to have positive impact for developing countries. In contrast, this paper shows that foreign capital inflows may cause an economy to be stuck in a middle-income trap. Introducing a simple capital market imperfection into a standard neoclassical (open-economy) model of growth, I show that FDI crowds out domestic investment when countries are still growing. If profitable investments are pursued by foreign capital owners, this does reduce chances for domestic entrepreneurs that they would have otherwise been able to take, by means of economy-wide savings. The long term losses due to the crowding-out effect occur despite the short-term gains that sudden capital inflo…

Labour economicsPhysical capitalFinancial capitalCost of capitalCapital (economics)Capital deepeningEconomicsCapital employedCapital Consumption AllowanceCapital intensityMonetary economicsSSRN Electronic Journal
researchProduct