Productivity growth in the industrial revolution: A new growth accounting perspective

N Crafts - The Journal of Economic History, 2004 - cambridge.org
N Crafts
The Journal of Economic History, 2004cambridge.org
The issue of why productivity growth during the British industrial revolution was slow despite
the arrival of famous inventions is revisited using a growth accounting methodology based
on an embodied innovation model. The results highlight the relatively small and long-
delayed impact of steam on productivity growth even when capital deepening is taken into
account. Even so, technological change including embodiment effects accounted entirely for
the acceleration in labor productivity growth that allowed the economy to achieve “modern …
The issue of why productivity growth during the British industrial revolution was slow despite the arrival of famous inventions is revisited using a growth accounting methodology based on an embodied innovation model. The results highlight the relatively small and long-delayed impact of steam on productivity growth even when capital deepening is taken into account. Even so, technological change including embodiment effects accounted entirely for the acceleration in labor productivity growth that allowed the economy to achieve “modern economic growth.”
Cambridge University Press