The Diffusion of Technology and Inequality Among Nations

46 Pages Posted: 21 Nov 2007 Last revised: 14 Sep 2022

See all articles by Boyan Jovanovic

Boyan Jovanovic

New York University - Department of Economics

Saul Lach

Hebrew University of Jerusalem - Department of Economics; CEPR

Date Written: June 1991

Abstract

One usually accounts for output growth in terms of the growth of the primary inputs: labor, physical capital, and possibly human capital. In this paper we account for growth with labor and with intermediate goods. Because we have no measures of the extent of adoption of most intermediate goods in most countries, we have to assume something about how they spread, based on what we see in U.S. data. We find that if all countries have (al the same production function, (b) the same speed of adoption technology, and (c) imperfectly correlated technology shocks, then we can easily account for the extent and persistence of inequality among nations. Unfortunately, while it easily generates the sorts of low frequency movements that we observe, our technology shock seems to have little to do with high frequency movements in GNP so that if our definition of this shock is correct, real business cycle models are way off the mark.

Suggested Citation

Jovanovic, Boyan and Lach, Saul, The Diffusion of Technology and Inequality Among Nations (June 1991). NBER Working Paper No. w3732, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=468395

Boyan Jovanovic (Contact Author)

New York University - Department of Economics ( email )

19 w 4 st.
New York, NY 10012
United States

Saul Lach

Hebrew University of Jerusalem - Department of Economics ( email )

Mount Scopus
Jerusalem, 91905
Israel
+972 2 588 3253 (Phone)
+972 2 581 6071 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://economics.huji.ac.il/facultye/saul/saul.html

CEPR

London
United Kingdom

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
54
Abstract Views
1,157
Rank
681,077
PlumX Metrics