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Comparative in British and American Manufacturing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2020

Bart van Ark*
Affiliation:
University of Groningen

Abstract

This article presents the results of a benchmark comparison of the relative level of manufacturing productivity in the United Kingdom and the United States for 1987. It shows value added per hour worked in the UK at 58 per cent of the corresponding level in the United States. The UK appears to show relatively high productivity levels in basic goods industries, including textiles, chemicals and basic metals. The benchmark results are extrapolated backwards to 1968 and forwards to 1990, showing a narrowing of some ten percentage points of the productivity gap between the two countries. It is also shown that differences in capital intensity account for only a small part of the productivity gap.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1992 National Institute of Economic and Social Research

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Footnotes

I am most grateful to Nienke Beintema for her assistance in making the detailed comparisons, and to Mary O'Mahony for providing me with a substantial part of the British data base. Comments on earlier drafts were made by Martin Baily, Andrew Britton, Steve Broadberry, Angus Maddison, Geoff Mason, Nicholas Oulton, Dirk Pilat, Sig Prais and by an anonymous referee, for which I am most grateful.

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