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Why did Productivity Fall So Much during the Great Depression?

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Why did Productivity Fall So Much during the Great Depression?
Author(s)Ohanian, Lee
AbstractThis study assesses five common explanations for the large decline in U.S. total factor productivity (TFP) during the Great Depression: changes in capacity utilization, factor input quality, and production composition; labor hoarding; and increasing returns to scale. The study finds that these factors explain less than onethird of the 18 percent TFP decline between 1929 and 1933. The rest of the decline remains unexplained. The study offers a potential explanation: declines in organization capital, the knowledge firms use to organize production, caused by breakdowns in relationships between firms and their suppliers, for example. As some firms failed during the Depression, efficiency in surviving firms decreased; managers had to shift time away from production in order to establish new relationships, and firms had to shift to unfamiliar technologies that initially were operated inefficiently.
IssueNo
Pages12-17
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceFederal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review
VolumeNo
PubDate2001
ISBN_ISSN

Economic Development, Growth, and Aggregate Productivity

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