Baumol's Diseases: A Macroeconomic Perspective
58 Pages Posted: 20 Jul 2006 Last revised: 26 Dec 2022
Date Written: May 2006
Abstract
William Baumol and his co-authors have analyzed the impact of differential productivity growth on the health of different sectors and on the overall economy. They argued that technologically stagnant sectors experience above average cost and price increases, take a rising share of national output, and slow aggregate productivity growth. Using industry data for the period 1948-2001, the present study investigates Baumol's diseases for the overall economy. It finds that technologically stagnant sectors clearly have rising relative prices and declining relative real outputs. Additionally, technologically progressive sectors tend to have slower hours and employment growth outside of manufacturing. Finally, sectoral shifts have tended to lower overall productivity growth as the share of stagnant sectors has risen over the second half of the twentieth century.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
By Anita Wölfl
-
Performance Rating and Yardstick Competition in Social Service Provision
-
Comparing Labour Productivity Growth in the OECD Area: The Role of Measurement
By Nadim Ahmad, François Lequiller, ...
-
What Drives Health Care Expenditure? Baumol's Model of 'Unbalanced Growth' Revisited
-
The Service Economy in OECD Countries
By Anita Wölfl
-
Measuring the Interaction between Manufacturing and Services
By Dirk Pilat and Anita Wölfl
-
Mental Health Expenditure in England: A Spatial Panel Approach
By Francesco Moscone, Martin Knapp, ...
-
Medical Care Price Indices: Problems and Opportunities / the Chung-Hua Lectures
-
Health Care Expenditure and Income in the OECD Reconsidered: Evidence from Panel Data
By Badi H. Baltagi and Francesco Moscone