Abstract: This paper examines the role that computers have
played in boosting U.S. economic growth in recent years. The paper focuses
on two effects--the effect of increased productivity in the
computer-producing sector and the effect of investments in computing
equipment on the productivity of those who use them--and concludes that
together they account for almost all of the recent acceleration in U.S. labor
productivity. In calculating the computer-usage effect, standard NIPA
measures of the capital stock are inappropriate for growth accounting
because they do not account for technological obsolescence; this occurs when
a machine that is still productive is retired because it is no longer near
the technological frontier. Using a theoretical framework that explicitly
accounts for technological obsolescence, alternative estimates of the
computer capital stock are developed that imply larger effects on growth of
computer capital accumulation than are suggested by the NIPA stocks.
Keywords: Computer, productivity, obsolescence
Full paper (261 KB PDF)
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Last update: March 10, 2000
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