Intangible investment in the EU and US before and since the Great Recession and its contribution to productivity growth

Author (Corporate)
Series Title
Series Details No.8, 2016 (January 2017)
Publication Date 01/01/2017
ISSN 1830-3676
Content Type

The Economics Department of the European Investment Bank provides economic analysis and studies to support EIB operations and to help define its positioning, strategy and policy. The Economics Department is a team of 25 economists and staff, under the responsibility of the Director Debora Revoltella.

EIB Working papers allow guest authors to explore particular topics in depth, often relating to the annual EIB Economics Conference publication.

This paper uses a new cross-country cross-industry dataset on investment in tangible and intangible assets for 18 European countries and the US. We set out a framework for measuring intangible investment and capital stocks and their effect on output, inputs and total factor productivity.

The analysis provides evidence on the diffusion of intangible investment across Europe and the US over the years 2000-2013 and offers growth accounting evidence before and after the Great Recession in 2008-2009.

Our major findings are the following:

First, tangible investment fell massively during the Great Recession and has hardly recovered, whereas intangible investment has been relatively resilient and recovered fast in the US but lagged behind in the EU.

Second, the sources of growth analysis including only national account intangibles (software, R&D, mineral exploration and artistic originals), suggest that capital deepening is the main driver of growth, with tangibles and intangibles accounting for 80% and 20% in the EU while both account for 50% in the US, over 2000-2013. Extending the asset boundary to the intangible assets not included in the national accounts (Corrado, Hulten and Sichel (2005)) makes capital deepening increases. The contribution of tangibles is reduced both in the EU and the US (60% and 40% respectively) while intangibles account for a larger share (40% in EU and 60% in the US).

Then, our analysis shows that since the Great Recession, the slowdown in labour productivity growth has been driven by a decline in TFP growth with relatively a minor role for tangible and intangible capital.

Finally, we document a significant correlation between stricter employment protection rules and less government investment in R&D, and a lower ratio of intangible to tangible investment.

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EIB: Publications: Economic Research: Working Papers http://www.eib.org/infocentre/publications/all/economic-research/working-papers.htm
EIB: Publications: Economic Research http://www.eib.org/infocentre/publications/all/economic-research/index.htm

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