Journal of Development Economics, March 2009, 88(2), pp.325-334. AbstractThis paper brings together development accounting techniques and the
dual economy model to address the role that factor markets have in
creating variation in aggregate total factor productivity (TFP).
Development accounting research has shown that much of the variation in
income across countries can be attributed to differences in TFP. The
dual economy model suggests that aggregate productivity is depressed by
having too many factors allocated to low productivity work in
agriculture. Data show large differences in marginal products of
similar factors within many developing countries, offering prima facie
evidence of this misallocation. Using a simple two-sector
decomposition of the economy, this article estimates the role of these
misallocations in accounting for the cross-country income distribution.
A key contribution is the ability to bring sector specific data on
human and physical capital stocks to the analysis. Variation across
countries in the degree of misallocation is shown to account for 30 --
40% of the variation in income per capita, and up to 80% of the
variation in aggregate TFP. |