The American System of economic growth release_lfdprupmsvhlvanyanxel77dqu

by Marvin Goodfriend, John McDermott

Published in Journal of economic growth (Boston) by Springer Science and Business Media LLC.

2021   p1-45

Abstract

The early history of industrialization in the United States-famously known as "The American System of Manufactures"-exhibited four key features: the substitution of specialized intermediate inputs for skilled work in assembling final goods, the freedom with which knowledge has long been shared in the United States, a learning technology that leverages existing mechanical know-how in human capital accumulation, and increasing returns to intermediate inputs in processing final goods. Our endogenous growth model embodies these components and utilizes historical time series data on labor force "operatives" and the Census of Manufactures to calibrate the model's parameters. Our simulation closely matches the 1.88% average per capita product growth in the United States from 1860 to date. The simulation predicts that growth will peak in 1980 and ultimately converge to 1.31%-a growth slowdown rooted from the beginning in the economization of skilled labor inherent in the American System. By 2000, simulated per capita product is 2.21 times larger than a counterfactual in which the American System of manufactures never existed.
In text/plain format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   3.7 MB
file_rj2xmubgq5cavalbf7nlag3hbu
link.springer.com (publisher)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  article-journal
Stage   published
Date   2021-02-24
Language   en ?
Journal Metadata
Not in DOAJ
In Keepers Registry
ISSN-L:  1381-4338
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: be367ee2-92b0-49f8-9c79-941279787ecf
API URL: JSON