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OverviewThe balance of the world economy is shifting away from the established economies of Europe, Japan, and the USA, towards the emerging economies of Asia, especially India and China. With contributions from some of the world's leading growth theorists, this book analyses the long-term process of structural change and productivity growth across the world from a unique comparative perspective. Ongoing research from the World KLEMS Initiative is used to comparatively study new sources of growth - including the role of investment in intangible assets, human capital, technology catch-up, and trade in global value chains. This book provides comparisons of industries and economies that are key to analysing the impacts of international trade and investment. This makes it an ideal read for academics and students interested in understanding current patterns of economic growth. It will also be of value to professionals with an interest in the drivers of economic growth and crisis. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Dale W. Jorgenson (Harvard University, Massachusetts) , Kyoji Fukao (Hitotsubashi University, Tokyo) , Marcel P. Timmer (Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, The Netherlands)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.80cm , Height: 3.50cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.700kg ISBN: 9781107143340ISBN 10: 1107143349 Pages: 596 Publication Date: 24 November 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of Contents1. The new world order Dale W. Jorgenson; 2. US Economic Growth - retrospect and prospect: lessons from a prototype industry-level production account for the United States, 1947–2012 Dale W. Jorgenson, Mun S. Ho and Jon D. Samuels; 3. The structural causes of Japan's lost decades Kyoji Fukao, Kenta Ikeuchi, Hyeog Ug Kwon, Young Gak Kim, Tatsuji Makino and Miho Takizawa; 4. Growth and stagnation in Europe Bart van Ark and Mary O'Mahony; 5. LA-KLEMS: economic growth and productivity in Latin America André Hofman, Matilde Mas, Claudio Aravena and Juan Fernández de Guevara; 6. On China's strategic move for a new stage of development - a productivity perspective Harry X. Wu; 7. Productivity growth in India under different policy regimes Deb Kusum Das, Abdula Erumban, Suresh Aggarwal and Sreerupa Sengupta; 8. Is mining fuelling long-run growth in Russia? Industry productivity growth trends in 1995–2012 Marcel P. Timmer and Ilya B. Voskoboynikov; 9. Intangibles, ICT and industry productivity growth: evidence from the EU Carol Corrado, Jonathan Haskel and Cecilia Jona-Lasinio; 10. Do intangibles contribute to productivity growth in East Asian countries? Evidence from Japan and Korea Hyunbae Chun, Miyagawa Tsutomu, Hak Kil Pyo and Tonogi Konomi; 11. BEA/BLS industry-level production account for the United States: integrated sources of growth, intangible capital, and the US recovery Steven Rosenthal, Matthew Russell, Jon D. Samuels, Erich H. Strassner and Lisa Usher; 12. Measuring human capital: country experiences and international initiatives Gang Liu and Barbara M. Fraumeni; 13. A half century of trans-Pacific competition: price-level indices and productivity gaps for Japanese and US industries, 1955–2012 Dale W. Jorgenson, Koji Nomura and Jon D. Samuels; 14. Searching for convergence and its causes - an industry perspective Robert Inklaar; 15. The rise of global manufacturing value chains: a new perspective based on the World Input-Output Database Marcel P. Timmer, Bart Los and Gaaitzen J. de Vries.ReviewsAdvance praise: 'Professors Jorgenson, Fukao, and Timmer report provocative and stunning projections of the future World Economy. The authors conclude the major source of global economic growth 1990-2012 has involved replication (adding identical production units with no change in technology) rather than innovation (creation of new products and processes). They project that accelerated rapid economic growth will continue, driven largely by replication in Asian countries. This is an absolute must-read book for students of global economic growth.' Ernst R. Berndt, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Advance praise: 'Dale Jorgenson and his collaborators have, over decades, produced consistent databases for productivity analysis. The endeavor is invaluable because what matters in the long-run for the country's - and the world's - standard of living is supply factors such as the quality and quantity of labor and capital. This volume contains industry-level analysis for a number of countries. It reveals, for example, that Japan, having tolerated inefficient sectors to persist, still has room for growth.' Fumio Hayashi, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, Tokyo Advance praise: 'The papers collected in this volume are both timely and highly relevant. They draw a broad picture of economic growth and its determinants, using a coherent framework and well-founded methodology. The proposed work brings together, in a unique way, advances in measurement and economic analysis - two strands of work that are too often conducted in separation. The authors represent a select set of researchers with excellent track records in the field and I recommend the volume as a most valuable reference for students, scholars, and analysts alike.' Paul Schreyer, The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Statistics Directorate 'Professors Jorgenson, Fukao, and Timmer report provocative and stunning projections of the future world economy. The authors conclude the major source of global economic growth 1990-2012 has involved replication (adding identical production units with no change in technology) rather than innovation (creation of new products and processes). They project that accelerated rapid economic growth will continue, driven largely by replication in Asian countries. This is an absolute must-read book for students of global economic growth.' Ernst R. Berndt, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 'Dale Jorgenson and his collaborators have, over decades, produced consistent databases for productivity analysis. The endeavor is invaluable because what matters in the long-run for the country's - and the world's - standard of living is supply factors such as the quality and quantity of labor and capital. This volume contains industry-level analysis for a number of countries. It reveals, for example, that Japan, having tolerated inefficient sectors to persist, still has room for growth.' Fumio Hayashi, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, Tokyo 'The papers collected in this volume are both timely and highly relevant. They draw a broad picture of economic growth and its determinants, using a coherent framework and well-founded methodology. The proposed work brings together, in a unique way, advances in measurement and economic analysis - two strands of work that are too often conducted in separation. The authors represent a select set of researchers with excellent track records in the field and I recommend the volume as a most valuable reference for students, scholars, and analysts alike.' Paul Schreyer, The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Statistics Directorate 'Professors Jorgenson, Fukao, and Timmer report provocative and stunning projections of the future world economy. The authors conclude the major source of global economic growth 1990-2012 has involved replication (adding identical production units with no change in technology) rather than innovation (creation of new products and processes). They project that accelerated rapid economic growth will continue, driven largely by replication in Asian countries. This is an absolute must-read book for students of global economic growth.' Ernst R. Berndt, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 'Dale Jorgenson and his collaborators have, over decades, produced consistent databases for productivity analysis. The endeavor is invaluable because what matters in the long-run for the country's - and the world's - standard of living is supply factors such as the quality and quantity of labor and capital. This volume contains industry-level analysis for a number of countries. It reveals, for example, that Japan, having tolerated inefficient sectors to persist, still has room for growth.' Fumio Hayashi, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, Tokyo 'The papers collected in this volume are both timely and highly relevant. They draw a broad picture of economic growth and its determinants, using a coherent framework and well-founded methodology. The proposed work brings together, in a unique way, advances in measurement and economic analysis - two strands of work that are too often conducted in separation. The authors represent a select set of researchers with excellent track records in the field and I recommend the volume as a most valuable reference for students, scholars, and analysts alike.' Paul Schreyer, The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Statistics Directorate Author InformationDale W. Jorgenson is the Samuel W. Morris University Professor at Harvard University. He was awarded the prestigious John Bates Clark Medal by the American Economic Association in 1971, and served as the President of the Association in 2000. He is the author of more than three hundred articles in economics, and the author and editor of 37 books. Kyoji Fukao is Professor at the Institute of Economic Research, Hitotsubashi University, and Program Leader at the Research Unit for Statistical and Empirical Analysis in Social Sciences in Japan. He co-authored Foreign Direct Investment in Japan with Ralph Paprzycki (Cambridge, 2008) and has published articles in several economic journals. Marcel P. Timmer is Professor of Economic Growth and Development and Director of the Groningen Growth and Development Centre (GGDC) at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands. He has published more than thirty articles in international journals, and is the lead author of the book Economic Growth in Europe (Cambridge, 2010). 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