Publication:
Accounting for growth in Spain, 1850-2019

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Advisors

Tutors

Editor

Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Instituto Figuerola de Historia y Ciencias Sociales

Publication date

Defense date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Serie/Núm

Working Papers in Economic History
20-10
Impact
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

To cite this item, use the following identifier: https://hdl.handle.net/10016/31465

Abstract

The current productivity slowdown has stimulated research on the causes of growth. We investigate here the proximate determinants of long-term growth in Spain. Over the last 170 years output per hour worked raised nearly 24-fold dominating GDP growth, while hours worked per person shrank by one-fourth and population trebled. Half of labour productivity growth resulted from capital deepening, one-third from total factor productivity, and labour quality contributed the rest. In phases of acceleration (the 1920s and 1954-85), TFP was labour productivity's main driver complemented by capital deepening. Since Spain's accession to the European Union(1985), labour productivity has sharply decelerated as capital deepening slowed down and TFP stagnated. Up to the Global Financial Crisis (2008) GDP growth mainly resulted from an increase in hours worked per person and, to a less extent, from sluggish labour productivity coming mostly from weak capital deepening. Institutional constraints help explain the labour productivity slowdown.

Note

ODS

Funder

Research project

Bibliographic citation


Table of contents

Has version

Is version of

Related dataset

Related Publication

Is part of