logo Factor-Augmenting Technical Change: An Empirical Assessment

Available Papers  •  FEEM Working Papers Series Home Page  •  Search the Collection  •  Submit a Paper

Factor-Augmenting Technical Change: An Empirical Assessment
Enrica De Cian, Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei

Download the Paper (PDF format) - June 22, 2009 Tell a colleague about it.
Printing Tips: Select 'print as image' in the Acrobat print dialog if you have trouble printing.

ABSTRACT:
Starting from a system of factor demands, an empirical model that allows estimating factor-augmenting technical change is derived. Factor-augmenting technical change is defined as the improvement in factor productivities that can occur either exogenously or endogenously, with changes in other macroeconomic variables. This paper provides additional estimates for the substitution possibilities among inputs and it offers new empirical evidence on the direction and sources of factor-augmenting technical change, an issue that has not yet been explored by the empirical literature on growth determinants. The empirical findings suggest that technical change is directed. Technical change tends to be more energy-saving than capital- and labour-saving. Both R&D investments and international trade are important determinants of growth in energy and capital productivity whereas technical change for labour is positively related to education expenditure. Therefore, the sources of factor-augmenting technical change go beyond R&D investments, as proposed in the theory of directed technical change, and they differ across inputs. In other words, not only is technical change directed, the sources of factor-augmenting technical change appear to be input specific.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Enrica De Cian, "Factor-Augmenting Technical Change: An Empirical Assessment" (June 22, 2009). Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei Working Papers. Working Paper 279.
http://www.bepress.com/feem/paper279