Capital Embodied Structural Change
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SeriesResearch on Monday
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Speaker(s)Elisa Keller (University of Exeter, United Kingdom)
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FieldMacroeconomics
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LocationErasmus University Rotterdam, Campus Woudestein, Polak 2-18
Rotterdam -
Date and time
March 18, 2024
11:30 - 12:30
Abstract
Structural change is one of the most robust features of modern economic
growth. Capital-embodied technological change (CETC), or the decline in the marginal consumption cost of investment, is a prominent source of modern economic growth. What is the role of CETC for structural change? We build new measures of sectoral CETC in the US from the decline in the price of new capital goods used in each sector between 1948 and 2020. We document faster CETC in services than in manufacturing than in agriculture; and show that CETC, when paired with the observed path of the labor share, can trace the dynamics of the price of output in agriculture relative to manufacturing and, to a less extent, that in services relative to manufacturing. To quantify the role of CETC for structural change we build a parsimonious model that accommodates sector-specific CETC through the usage of distinct bundles of equipment, as well as an endogenous sectoral labor share, which mediates the passthrough between CETC and structural change. Via counterfactuals, we find that CETC is the primary driver of the reallocation of output away from agriculture and accounts for a third of the reallocation towards services. These findings emphasize the
importance of the composition of sectoral investment for structural change.