Title: Infrastructures and ICT.
1Infrastructures and ICT. Measurement Issues and
Impact on Economic Growth Matilde
Mas Universitat de València Ivie OECD
Workshop on Productivity Analysis and
Measurement Bern, 16-18 October 2006
2OBJECTIVE OF THE PAPER
- The measurement of the impact of ICT and
Infrastructures on Economic Growth - Using a growth accounting framework
- Previous step address the measurement problem
posed by the presence of publicly owned assets
(such as infrastructures) - Illustration Spain as an example
3TWO POINTS OF DEPARTURE
- The Infrastructures debate of the late eighties
and early nineties. A growth and convergence
debate - The ICT revolution of the late nineties and the
beginning of the new century -
4TWO POINTS OF DEPARTURE
- Infrastructures
- Responsible of the US productivity slowdown of
the 70s and 80s - Engine of growth in the European countries
- Factor lying behind the lack of convergence of
per capita income (as in the case of the Spanish
regions and provinces) - ICT capital (production and use) as source of
- US productivity upsurge
- EU (including Spain) poor productivity
performance
5- INFRASTRUCTURES
- MEASUREMENT ISSUES
6INFRASTRUCTURES MEASUREMENT ISSUES
- Infrastructures are mainly provided by the public
sector. - National Accounts do not assign a net return to
the flow of services provided by public capital. - The only recognized flow is public fixed capital
consumption
7INFRASTRUCTURES MEASUREMENT ISSUES
- Implications
- NA Gross Operating Surplus figures are
underestimated because the value of the capital
services provided by public capital is not fully
considered. - Consequently, the value of output is also
underestimated in NA figures, afecting both its
level and rate of growth
8INFRASTRUCTURES MEASUREMENT ISSUES
- If the standard (endogenous) approach is used
when computing the rate of return, 1 2 will
have consequences on - the user cost
- the input shares
- the growth accounting results
9INFRASTRUCTURES MEASUREMENT ISSUES
- According to NA practices
- GOS GOS (private)Public Capital Consumption
- From an analytical perspective
- GOS (private) Value of private capital
services
10INFRASTRUCTURES MEASUREMENT ISSUES
- Standard computation of the internal rate of
return - An Alternative Revised computation (referring
only to the private sector)
11INFRASTRUCTURES MEASUREMENT ISSUES
- Applying Nordhaus (2004) basic principle for
measuring non-market activities - Non-market goods and services should be treated
as if they were produced and consumed as market
activitiesthe prices of non-market goods and
services should be imputed on the basis of the
comparable market goods and services
12INFRASTRUCTURES MEASUREMENT ISSUES
- Revised Gross Operating Surplus (including the
value of public capital services) - Revised Nominal Value Added (including the value
of public capital services)
13INFRASTRUCTURES MEASUREMENT ISSUES
- Capital shares Standard Approach
- Capital shares Revised Approach
14 15THE SPANISH DATA
- GFCF available for
- 18 assets, of which
- 3 ICT assets (hardware, software, communication)
- 6 types of infrastructures (roads, railways,
airports, ports, water urban infrastructures) - And 43 branches of activity, of which
- 15 manufactures
- 23 services
16Treatment of Infrastructures in Spanish Capital
Stockestimates. An illustration
- Recording of year t investment in infrastructures
17- IMPLICATIONS OF THE TWO APPROACHES
- Spain as an example
18IMPLICATIONS OF THE TWO APPROACHES
19IMPLICATIONS OF THE TWO APPROACHES
20IMPLICATIONS OF THE TWO APPROACHES
- On capital rate of growth
21IMPLICATIONS OF THE TWO APPROACHES
22- ICT AND INFRASTRUCTURES
- Results from a growth
- accounting perspective
23ICT and Infrastructures. Results
24ICT and Infrastructures. Results
25ICT and Infrastructures. Results
26- SUMMARY AND CONCLUDING REMARKS
27SUMMARY AND CONCLUDING REMARKS
- 1. ON MEASUREMENT PROBLEMS
- The paper identifies a methodological problem in
the growth accounting framework arising from the
way public assets are treated by National
Accounts. - It proposes an alternative approach to
computation of the internal rate of return. - The standard (endogenous) approach, does not take
into account the full value of the capital
services provided by publicly owned goods. - In contrast, the revised approach proposed here
computes the internal rate of return for the
private sector of the economy. - And, following Nordhaus principle, it is used to
estimate the value of the capital services
provided by public capital.
28SUMMARY AND CONCLUDING REMARKS
- 1. ON MEASUREMENT PROBLEMS
- Implications (taking Spanish data as reference)
- GVA figures provided by NA are underestimated by
5-6 and Gross Operating Surplus by aprox. 15. - The share of capital services on total output is
around 3.5 percentage points higher when the
value of public capital services is fully
included (as proposed by the revised approach) - However, the growth rates of both, GVA and the
Volume Index of Capital Services are not
significantly affected.
29SUMMARY AND CONCLUDING REMARKS
- 1. ON MEASUREMENT PROBLEMS
- Implications (taking Spanish data as reference)
- Neither ICT capital services share on total
output nor the aggregate rate of growth of these
types of assets are practically affected by the
use of any of the two approaches. - As a consequence, the contribution of ICT assets
to the growth rate of labor productivity does not
seem to depend on the chosen methodology. - However, the contribution of total capital and
TFP is (though modestly) affected.
30SUMMARY AND CONCLUDING REMARKS
- 2. ICT and Infrastructures impact on growth
- The impact of an asset on the rate of economic
growth depends on two factors its share on total
output and its own rate of growth. - On the shares
- The share of ICT capital services on total
output has been slightly lower (around 0.04) than
that of infrastructures (around 0.05-0.06). - Under certain assumptions (CRS, perfect
competition, optimizing behavior) these shares
measure the output elasticities of the assets. - Concerning ICT assets, the highest elasticity
corresponds to communication and the lowest to
hardware, while software is the ICT asset showing
the strongest elasticity increase. -
31SUMMARY AND CONCLUDING REMARKS
- 2. ICT and Infrastructures impact on growth
- On the shares
- The figures for infrastructures elasticities are
close to the ones previously obtained for Spain
from an econometric estimation of a production
function. - Thus, the figures for infrastructures reconcile
the results obtained from two alternative
strategies, econometric estimation and growth
accounting. - However, it also contradicts a previous result
for Spain here the infrastructures elasticity
was rather stable along the period while previous
(econometric) results indicated a continuous
reduction.
32SUMMARY AND CONCLUDING REMARKS
- 2. ICT and Infrastructures impact on growth
- On the growth rates
- The rate of growth of total (non residential)
capital has been rather strong in Spain (4.5 on
average) - ICT accumulation was even stronger (11) in
1995-2004 although it decelerated to 7.5 in
2000-2004 - Infrastructures rate of growth was less than a
third of ICTs between 1995-2000, but more than a
half in 2000-2004.
33SUMMARY AND CONCLUDING REMARKS
- 2. ICT and Infrastructures impact on growth
- As a combination of the two effects
- The contribution of ICT capital has been notable
higher than that of Infrastructures. - Office machinery showed the highest contribution,
and software the lowest one - Infrastructures contribution was negative in
1995-2000 but it accelerated in 2000-2004. - ICT showed the opposite behavior, decelerating in
the second subperiod.