令人失望的欧洲生产率增长是否反映出放缓趋势?权衡证据和评估未来

John G. Fernald, R. Inklaar
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引用次数: 12

摘要

大衰退以来的几年里,许多观察家都强调了发达经济体劳动力和全要素生产率(TFP)增长的缓慢步伐。本文主要关注欧洲的经验,在欧洲,我们强调在全球金融危机(GFC)爆发之前,TFP增长趋势已经很低。这表明,除了深度危机本身或危机以来的政策变化之外,重要的是要考虑其他因素。上世纪90年代中期以后,欧洲经济体的全要素生产率(TFP)不再与美国趋同,甚至开始分化。也就是说,与美国相反,一些北欧国家的宏观经济证据表明,全球金融危机对全要素生产率增长产生了进一步的不利影响。尽管如此,经济政策面临的挑战看起来与大衰退之前讨论过的挑战惊人地相似,尽管政策含义似乎不那么明确。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Does Disappointing European Productivity Growth Reflect a Slowing Trend? Weighing the Evidence and Assessing the Future
In the years since the Great Recession, many observers have highlighted the slow pace of labor and total factor productivity (TFP) growth in advanced economies. This paper focuses on the European experience, where we highlight that trend TFP growth was already low in the runup to the Global Financial Crisis (GFC). This suggests that it is important to consider factors other than just the deep crisis itself or policy changes since the crisis. After the mid-1990s, European economies stopped converging, or even began diverging, from the U.S. level of TFP. That said, in contrast to the United States, there is some macroeconomic evidence for some northern European countries that the GFC had a further adverse impact on TFP growth. Still, the challenges for economic policy look surprisingly similar to the ones discussed prior to the Great Recession, even if the policy implications seem less clear.
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