Europe falling behind: Structural transformation and labor productivity growth differences between Europe and the U.S.
通过量化一般均衡模型,研究了1970-2019年欧洲与美国劳动生产率的收敛与发散,发现劳动力向低生产率部门再分配阻碍了市场服务业生产率增长对总劳动生产率的潜在影响,且贸易无法缓解欧洲的停滞。
This paper investigates the convergence and subsequent divergence of labor productivity between the U.S. and Europe through a quantitative general equilibrium framework that integrates endogenous changes in employment shares as a function of exogenous and unbalanced labor productivity growth rates across sectors. We calibrate our model to the U.S. and test it against Europe from 1970 to 2019. Our model accurately captures structural transformation and aggregate labor productivity paths, as well as the timing of Europe’s transition from convergence to divergence relative to the U.S. Leveraging a set of numerical experiments, we find that the reallocation of labor toward less productive sectors in response to sectoral productivity changes hinders the potential effects that the productivity growth in market services may have on the aggregate labor productivity: The heterogeneous productivity observed within services brings forth a Baumol cost disease whereby productive sectors gain less employment share than their productivity growth would imply under constant shares, despite their strong income effects. An extended version of our model that accounts for international trade suggests that it is implausible for Europe to export its way out of the aggregate stagnation unleashed by labor reallocation toward unproductive sectors. • European labor productivity caught up with the US until 1995, then diverged. • Divergence reflects widening gaps in business and financial services productivity. • A six-sector structural transformation model reproduces the full 1970–2019 pattern. • Trade linkages amplify the divergence: Europe exports from less dynamic sectors. • Business and financial services account for most of the post-1995 productivity gap.