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Does information technology raise Japan's productivity?
Authors:Takuji Fueki  Takuji Kawamoto
Institution:1. Research and Statistics Department, Bank of Japan, 2-1-1, Nihonbashi-Hongokucho, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, Japan;2. Financial Markets Department, Bank of Japan, 2-1-1, Nihonbashi-Hongokucho, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract:A standard growth accounting exercise indicates that, after Japan's “lost decade,” its overall total-factor-productivity (TFP) growth has increased notably since 2000. This productivity revival has been limited, however, to information technology (IT) production—has not been a broad-based productivity acceleration like that seen in the United States after the mid-1990s. This paper examines the relationship between IT and productivity gains by employing the “augmented” growth accounting framework for Japanese industry-level data from 1975 through 2005. In particular, we estimate “purified” technology change at industry level by accounting for cyclical mismeasurement of inputs. We find that the post-2000 increase in overall TFP growth does indeed appear to arise from an increase in technological change. Furthermore, the pickup in technology growth has occurred not only in the production of IT but also in the industries that use IT intensively. Our results suggest the possibility that stories of IT as a general purpose technology (GPT) could apply to Japan as well as to the United States.
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