ISSN - Footer
ISSN 2363-202X
Navigation
Skip to Content
Productivity & innovation competencies in the midst of the digital transformation age
DisplayLogo
Publications Office of the European Union
MainSearch
Select
All collections
EU law
EU publications
EU official directory
Editorial Content
Summaries of Legislation
More
Advanced search
Browse by subject
Expert Search
Language Selector
български (bg)
español (es)
čeština (cs)
dansk (da)
Deutsch (de)
eesti keel (et)
Ελληνικά (el)
English (en)
français (fr)
Gaeilge (ga)
hrvatski (hr)
italiano (it)
latviešu valoda (lv)
lietuvių kalba (lt)
magyar (hu)
Malti (mt)
Nederlands (nl)
polski (pl)
português (pt)
română (ro)
slovenčina (sk)
slovenščina (sl)
suomi (fi)
svenska (sv)
BasketSummary
0
X
Basket
x
items
X
This item has been added.
Qty:
x
€
x
Sub-total
€
x
Total
€
0.0
View basket
Checkout
MyPortal
Sign in
Navigation Menu
LAW
EU PUBLICATIONS
RESEARCH AND INNOVATION
OPEN DATA
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
EU WHOISWHO
Navigation Menu
LAW
EU PUBLICATIONS
RESEARCH AND INNOVATION
OPEN DATA
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
EU WHOISWHO
Publications Office of the EU
Help
Navigation Menu
Breadcrumb
Publication detail
Navigation Menu
AccessibilityTools
Maintenance EN
Please note that this website will be undergoing technical maintenance between 28 and 31 August. Consequently, users may experience instabilities and limited functionality. We apologise for the inconvenience.
Web Content Display (Global)
For a better user experience please update your browser or use
Chrome
or
Firefox
browser.
×
Publication Detail Actions Portlet
Utilities
Add to my publications
Create alert
Permanent link
Metadata RDF
(Opens New Window)
(Opens New Window)
Embed in website
More
Cancel
Rate this publication
custom-survey-notification
We would like to hear your views on this material or activity.
Please click here to provide your feedback.
Publication Detail Portlet
Publication detail
Home
EU publications
Download
Order
Productivity & innovation competencies in the midst of the digital transformation age
A EU-US comparison
Publication metadata
This paper reviews the latest evidence on productivity growth by industry and innovation competencies by occupation to observe whether, beneath the productivity slowdown of the past decade in both the European Union and the United States, signs can be detected of structural performance improvements due to digital transformation. We find that in the United States, the digital-producing sector has
continued to contribute strongly to aggregate productivity in recent years. While labour productivity growth in the US was only 0.6 percent from 2013-2017, as much as 0.5 percentage point (or 86 percent) was coming from digital-producing industries representing only 8.2 percent of US GDP. Other industries, which account for the remaining 92 percent of the US economy, including some of the most digital intensive-using industries, have seen a dramatic decline in their contribution to productivity growth. In the European Union, the digital-producing sector has seen a strong decline in its contribution to productivity growth, which by 2013-2017 was only one third of the US contribution at 0.15 percentage points. However, the most digital intensive-using industries contributed 4 times as much to labor productivity as in the United States, driving overall labour productivity growth from 2013-2017 up to 0.9 percentage point – 0.3 percentage points higher than in the US. A positive factor, both in the EU and in the US, is that total factor productivity (TFP) growth in the most intensive digital-producing industries, notably trade and business services has improved. Digital intensiveusing manufacturing industries generally contribute less to productivity than digital intensive-using services, partly because of slower productivity growth and partly because of their smaller size. A novel measure of innovation competencies by occupation shows that, when applied to industries, those industries with the highest competencies, also show positive productivity contributions, and the most intensive digital-using industries are strongly represented in this category. Overall, while the evidence is still thin due to time lags in the data, there are signs of positive contributions to productivity growth related to digital transformation even though those effects are still not widespread observable across the economy.
View more
View less
Download and languages
Close
Available languages and formats
Download
X
Available languages and formats
English
(en)
pdf
Publication details
Related publications
Published:
2020-02-06
Corporate author(s):
Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs
(
European Commission
)
Personal author(s):
Vries, Klaas de
;
Erumban, Abdul
;
Ark, Bart van
Themes:
Economy — Finance
Subject:
digital technology
,
economic growth
,
European Union
,
innovation
,
new technology
,
productivity
,
technological change
,
United States
PDF
ISSN
2443-8022
ISBN
978-92-76-11187-0
DOI
10.2765/106835
Catalogue number
KC-BD-19-006-EN-N
PDF
ISSN
2443-8022
ISBN
978-92-76-11187-0
DOI
10.2765/106835
Catalogue number
KC-BD-19-006-EN-N
View more
View less
Show all issues in this serial
Publication Viewer
Document viewer
The document doesn't have a viewable format at this time
Go Back Widget
Back to list of results
survey-d1
OP Portal Survey
×
Please help us improve this portal by taking a survey.