Associate Editors |
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xi | |
Contributors |
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xiii | |
Introduction |
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xv | |
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1 Economic growth: a different view |
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1.1 The emergence of growth |
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1 | (1) |
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1 | (1) |
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1 | (3) |
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4 | (2) |
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1.5 Development of consumer demand |
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6 | (1) |
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1.6 Development of investment demand |
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7 | (1) |
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1.7 Different growth paths |
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7 | (3) |
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1.8 Sustaining economic growth |
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10 | (1) |
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1.9 Innovation and growth |
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10 | (1) |
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11 | (1) |
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1.11 Our view of economic growth |
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12 | (1) |
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1.12 Relationship to existing theory |
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13 | (1) |
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14 | (1) |
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14 | (3) |
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15 | (2) |
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2 Expanding the conceptual foundation, scope, and relevance of the US national accounts: the intersection of theory, research, and measurement |
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17 | (1) |
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2.2 Measurement without theory |
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17 | (1) |
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2.3 Today's national accounts and economic theory |
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18 | (1) |
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2.4 Joint evolution of theory, research, and national accounts |
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19 | (13) |
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2.5 Conclusion and next steps |
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32 | (5) |
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32 | (3) |
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35 | (2) |
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3 Tax policy and resource allocation |
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37 | (1) |
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3.2 Cost of capital and effective tax rates |
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38 | (4) |
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3.3 Dynamic general equilibrium model of the US Economy |
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42 | (3) |
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3.4 Equilibrium of the model and solution algorithm |
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45 | (3) |
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3.5 Welfare effects of tax reform |
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48 | (4) |
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52 | (3) |
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53 | (2) |
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4 Sources of growth in the world economy: a comparison of G7 and E7 economies |
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55 | (1) |
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4.2 E7 and G7 in the world economy |
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56 | (3) |
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4.3 Sources of growth during 2000--- 17: E7 versus G7 |
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59 | (2) |
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4.4 E7 economies in the global dynamics of economic catch-up: performance and drivers |
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61 | (3) |
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4.5 Prospects for the E7 and G7 economies in 2027: a projection exercise |
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64 | (4) |
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68 | (7) |
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Appendix 4.A Growth decomposition framework |
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69 | (1) |
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Appendix 4.B Decomposition of the catch-up performance index |
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70 | (1) |
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Appendix 4.C Growth predicting model and key assumptions |
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71 | (2) |
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73 | (2) |
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5 European productivity in the digital age: evidence from EU KLEMS |
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75 | (1) |
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5.2 The EU KLEMS database |
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76 | (3) |
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79 | (4) |
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5.4 Aggregate growth accounting |
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83 | (5) |
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5.5 Growth by sector characteristics |
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88 | (4) |
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5.6 Summary and conclusions |
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92 | (3) |
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93 | (2) |
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6 Manufacturing productivity in India: the role of foreign sourcing of inputs and domestic capacity building |
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95 | (4) |
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6.2 Trends in total factor productivity growth in India |
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99 | (4) |
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6.3 Determinants of TFP: the role of GVC participation and equipment capital use |
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103 | (8) |
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6.4 Summary and conclusion |
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111 | (6) |
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113 | (1) |
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Annexure-I: summary Statistics for FVA (foreign value-added), equipment share, and ICT (information and communication technology) variables |
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114 | (1) |
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114 | (1) |
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114 | (3) |
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7 An international comparison on TFP changes in ICT industry among Japan, Korea, Taiwan, China, and the United States |
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117 | (1) |
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118 | (1) |
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7.3 Methodology and data compilation |
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119 | (5) |
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124 | (9) |
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7.5 Conclusion and suggestion |
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133 | (4) |
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134 | (2) |
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136 | (1) |
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8 Losing Steam?---An industry origin analysis of China's productivity slowdown |
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137 | (3) |
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8.2 The APPF-Domar framework of growth accounting |
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140 | (3) |
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8.3 Major data and measurement issues |
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143 | (7) |
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8.4 Industry grouping and periodization |
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150 | (2) |
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8.5 Discussion of empirical results |
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152 | (8) |
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160 | (1) |
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161 | (8) |
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165 | (4) |
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9 Growth origins and patterns in the market economy of mainland Norway, 1997--2014 |
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169 | (2) |
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9.2 The Norwegian KLEMS database |
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171 | (2) |
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9.3 Methodology: industry contributions to aggregate growth |
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173 | (4) |
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9.4 Aggregate ALP growth decomposed by sources |
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177 | (2) |
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9.5 Contributions by sector ALP |
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179 | (2) |
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9.6 Sector contributions by capital and labor inputs |
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181 | (3) |
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9.7 Contributions by sector MFP |
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184 | (3) |
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9.8 Growth patterns in diagram |
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187 | (4) |
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191 | (4) |
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193 | (2) |
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10 Progress on Australia and Russia KLEMS |
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195 | (1) |
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196 | (9) |
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205 | (12) |
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217 | (4) |
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Appendix. List of industries and composition of aggregated sectors |
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217 | (2) |
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219 | (1) |
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219 | (2) |
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11 Toward a BEA-BLS integrated industry-level production account for 1947---2016 |
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221 | (2) |
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11.2 Production Account framework |
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223 | (1) |
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11.3 Output and intermediate inputs including energy, materials, and services |
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224 | (2) |
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226 | (3) |
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229 | (3) |
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11.6 Integration adjustments |
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232 | (1) |
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11.7 Industry-level sources of growth |
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233 | (7) |
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11.8 The sector origins of economic growth |
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240 | (7) |
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11.9 Conclusions and next steps |
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247 | (4) |
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248 | (1) |
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248 | (3) |
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12 Benchmark 2011 integrated estimates of the Japan---US price-level index for industry outputs |
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251 | (3) |
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254 | (2) |
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12.3 Data and measurement |
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256 | (5) |
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261 | (9) |
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270 | (13) |
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Appendix: bilateral price model |
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270 | (10) |
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280 | (3) |
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13 The impact of information and communications technology investment on employment in Japan and Korea |
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283 | (2) |
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13.2 A model of 1CT investment effects on employment |
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285 | (1) |
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13.3 Empirical results for Japan and Korea |
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286 | (9) |
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295 | (4) |
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Appendix: Industry classification |
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296 | (1) |
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297 | (2) |
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14 Economic valuation of knowledge-based capital: an International comparison |
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299 | (2) |
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14.2 Calculating knowledge intensity: methodological approach |
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301 | (4) |
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14.3 Statistical data: sources and coverage |
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305 | (4) |
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14.4 Knowledge intensity estimates: aggregated results |
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309 | (12) |
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14.5 Knowledge intensity estimates: industry results |
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321 | (13) |
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334 | (5) |
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336 | (3) |
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15 Measuring consumer inflation in a digital economy |
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15.1 Introduction and key findings |
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339 | (2) |
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15.2 Quality change in existing product lines, truly novel products, and free products |
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341 | (8) |
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15.3 What's the potential impact? |
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349 | (5) |
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15.4 Two unorthodox points and beyond GDP |
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354 | (3) |
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357 | (6) |
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Annex 15.A Weights in household consumption basket of product categories potentially affected by measurement errors in deflators |
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358 | (2) |
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360 | (1) |
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360 | (2) |
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362 | (1) |
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16 Intangible capital, innovation, and productivity a la Jorgenson evidence from Europe and the United States |
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16.1 Intangible investment and capital |
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363 | (3) |
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16.2 The sources-of-growth model with intangibles |
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366 | (7) |
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373 | (7) |
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380 | (7) |
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381 | (1) |
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The INTAN-Invest database |
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381 | (1) |
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Methods and sources (EU countries) |
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382 | (1) |
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Methods and sources (United States) |
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383 | (1) |
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384 | (3) |
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17 Getting smart about phones: new price indexes and the allocation of spending between devices and services plans in Personal Consumption Expenditures |
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387 | (3) |
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17.2 IDC data and smartphone characteristics |
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390 | (2) |
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17.3 Methodology for quality-adjusted price indexes |
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392 | (2) |
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17.4 Smartphone price indexes |
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394 | (5) |
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17.5 Allocation of PCE spending between cellular devices and bundled service contracts |
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399 | (7) |
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406 | (7) |
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407 | (3) |
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410 | (1) |
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410 | (3) |
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18 Accounting for growth and productivity in global value chains |
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413 | (1) |
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18.2 General approach and data |
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414 | (5) |
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18.3 Growth accounts for global value chains |
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419 | (4) |
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18.4 Factor substitution bias in measuring GVC TFP |
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423 | (2) |
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425 | (2) |
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425 | (2) |
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19 Emissions accounting and carbon tax incidence in CGE models: bottom-up versus top-down |
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427 | (2) |
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19.2 Accounting for energy inputs in CGE models |
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429 | (6) |
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19.3 The contrast between bottom-up and top-down accounting of a carbon tax |
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435 | (18) |
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453 | (2) |
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454 | (1) |
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20 Analyzing carbon price policies using a general equilibrium model with household energy demand functions |
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455 | (2) |
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20.2 A two-stage model of household energy demand |
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457 | (5) |
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20.3 Carbon policy assessment methodology |
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462 | (9) |
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20.4 The impact of a carbon tax |
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471 | (5) |
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476 | (5) |
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Appendix. Economic-energy growth model of China |
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477 | (2) |
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479 | (2) |
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21 GDP and social welfare: an assessment using regional data |
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481 | (2) |
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21.2 Regional Gross Domestic Product as a welfare measure |
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483 | (5) |
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21.3 Individual welfare, consumption, and prices |
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488 | (7) |
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21.4 The measurement of social welfare |
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495 | (3) |
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21.5 Regional welfare in the United States |
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498 | (6) |
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21.6 Summary and conclusions |
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504 | (5) |
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506 | (3) |
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22 Accumulation of human and market capital in the United States, 1975---2012: an analysis by gender |
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509 | (6) |
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22.2 Part II: underlying trends by gender |
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515 | (3) |
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22.3 Part III: national level accounts |
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518 | (5) |
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22.4 Part IV: human capital components by gender |
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523 | (5) |
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528 | (3) |
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528 | (3) |
Index |
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531 | |