Total Factor Productivity and the R & D Expenditures
Abstract
The total factor productivity (TFP) growth comes from improvements in the quality of labor and capital
and from other sources of technological change, many of them in the form of externalities, spillovers,
representing contributions of science and innovations in other enterprises, industries and countries.
Economies of scale and scope, as well as improving x-efficiency, are among the other potential
sources of total factor productivity growth. The goal of this paper is to advance the debate on the
contribution of R & D to productivity. We used the method of constructing a proxy variable for interindustry
technology spillovers and test its statistical association with the TFP growth.
and from other sources of technological change, many of them in the form of externalities, spillovers,
representing contributions of science and innovations in other enterprises, industries and countries.
Economies of scale and scope, as well as improving x-efficiency, are among the other potential
sources of total factor productivity growth. The goal of this paper is to advance the debate on the
contribution of R & D to productivity. We used the method of constructing a proxy variable for interindustry
technology spillovers and test its statistical association with the TFP growth.
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PDF (Bahasa Indonesia)DOI: https://doi.org/10.29313/jstat.v9i2.995
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