Volume 69, Issue 4 p. E42-E65
ARTICLE

AN ATTEMPT TO EXPLAIN DIFFERENCES IN ECONOMIC GROWTH: A STOCHASTIC FRONTIER APPROACH

Diana Aguiar

Católica Porto Business School, Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Portugal

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Leonardo Costa

Católica Porto Business School and CEGE, Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Portugal

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Elvira Silva

Corresponding Author

Faculdade de Economia do Porto, Center for Economics and Finance at UP (CEF.UP), Portugal

Correspondence: Elvira Silva, Associate Professor of Economics, Faculdade de Economia do Porto, Center for Economics and Finance at UP (CEF.UP), Rua Doutor Roberto Frias, 4200–464 Porto, Portugal. Email: esilva@fep.up.pt.Search for more papers by this author
First published: 22 October 2016
Citations: 3

We gratefully acknowledge the valuable comments on earlier versions of the paper of two anonymous referees and Ricardo Ribeiro, a colleague from the Department of Economics of Católica Porto Business School.

ABSTRACT

Total factor productivity (TFP), factor accumulation, and growth are analysed for a panel of 40 countries in 2001–11. TFP growth and technical inefficiency are estimated using a stochastic frontier model. Environmental variables are found to have an important role in explaining differences in inefficiency across countries. Over 2001–11, the general improvement in technical efficiency of countries is almost outweighed by technological regress. Results indicate that differences in factor accumulation between OECD and emerging economies are more important than differences in TFP change to explain differences in economic growth. Results also indicate negative and significant random shocks for the OECD countries.

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