Title: IT in Europe and the US
1InnovaTion, InvesTment and ImiTation How
Information and Communication Technology Affected
European Productivity Performance Bart Los and
Marcel Timmer, University of Groningen (Faculty
of Economics, Groningen Growth and Development
Centre) This project is funded by the European
Commission, Research Directorate General as part
of the 6th Framework Programme, Priority 8,
"Policy Support and Anticipating Scientific and
Technological Needs".
2End of European catch-up process
3Slowdown in most countries
4ICT as a GPT
- ICT as GPT (see David, AER 1990 Brynjolfsson
Hitt, JEPersp 2000 Hall Trajtenberg 2004 NBER) - Europe has exhausted imitation in old
technologies, and is lagging in application of
new ICT-based innovations (Aghion and Howitt
2006, JEEA). - Divergence is possible. Degree to which imitation
can lead to productivity gains depends on
technology operated (appropriate technology,
Basu Weil, QJE, 1998) - Traditional growth accounting findings Total
Factor Productivity growth in market services in
US, but not in Europe (see Jorgenson, Ho and
Stiroh 2005 Triplett and Bosworth 2004 Inklaar,
OMahony and Timmer, RIW, 2003 Timmer Van Ark,
OxEP 2005.)
5This paper
- TFP should be divided into pure technological
change (innovation) and efficiency changes
(imitation) through estimation of global
production frontier. (see Los Timmer, JDevE
2005, Timmer and Los, JPA 2005) - ICT capital is a critical input
- Questions
- How many years are European countries lagging
behind in ICT? - How efficient are European countries in using
old-vintage ICT? - Does this differ for various sectors?
- How much of European growth is due to innovation
and how much due to imitation?
6Falling behind, catching up or leapfrogging?
7Frontier Estimation
- Data Envelopment Analysis on 1 output (GDP) and 3
inputs (labour, IT and non-IT), assuming CRS
(Färe et all, 1994, AER) - Non-parametric approach with very few
restrictions on production technology - Advantage is flexible functional form, which
allows for localized technological change - DEA with intertemporal dataset, to avoid
technological regress. - Frontier for year y based on all observations
from 1980 up to y - First frontier for 1990.
8Frontier estimation (1)
9Frontier estimation (2)
10Frontier estimation (3)
11Frontier estimation (4)
12Data
- Fourteen countries EU-15 (minus Luxembourg and
Ireland), and U.S. - GDP (at PPP), total hours worked and capital
stocks for 1980-2004 - Harmonised Capital stock estimates for six
assets, using Perpetual Inventory Method,
aggregated into two groups Non-IT and IT capital - Non-IT machinery, transport equipment and
non-residential buildings - IT office and computing equipment,
communication equipment and software. - All data from The Conference Board and Groningen
Growth and Development Centre, Total Economy
Database, May 2006, (www.ggdc.net) (Updated from
Timmer Van Ark, OxEP, 2005)
13Lagging ICT stocks in Europe
14Frontier Results 1990
- Frontier points include UK (80,97,88), US (89,
90), DK (80, 85, 86), France (80, 90)
15Frontier Results 1995
- New Frontier points include UK (95), US (94,
95), DK (95)
16Frontier Results 2000
- New Frontier points include US (98,99,00), UK
(97, 00), DK (96,00)
17Frontier Results 2004
- New Frontier points include Fr (04), US (04),
DK (02,04)
18European countries in 2004
19ICT Lags ...
20But some have succesfully imitated, or even
innovated
21Efficiency scores
22European manufacturing is innovating
23Main findings and road ahead
- Global production frontier is driven by
investment in ICT capital goods - European countries lag US in application of ICT
technology (4 to 16 years) - Some countries are succesful imitators (FR, UK,
DK), but others face divergence (IT, PT, ES) - Different pattern at industry level innovation
in manufacturing in some countries -
24Main findings and road ahead
- Industry-level analysis, in particular services
EUKLEMS data project - Explanation of divergence in terms of Imitation
(inefficiency model) including regulation and
skilled labour supply as determinants -