Productivity in the economies of Europe
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the constant growth of V until 1908, when restnctive policies were eased The next spurt of growth in V took place during the First World War and was due to real rather than monetary causes Spain remained neutral during the war, and had an export boom which pro- voked scarcities and steep pnce rises prices running ahead of money brought about increases in V The reverse process took place in the following years pnces dechned faster than money and V dropped drastically between 1918 and 1922, it hovered at around its 'normal' level (3 00-3 50) until the Spanish Civil War The trough reached by V dunng the mid-1940's was probably due to the low levels of income which char- actenzed the first years ofthe Franco era, and the mcrease in 1946-51 to the gradual economic recovery towards prewar economic levels The relatively mild decline which ensued must be attributed to the 'normal' decrease in V which is typical ofthe early and middle stages of growth 5 In the third place, the relative stability of V over the long run, and the relative ease with which we can explain shorter-run fluctuations are encoraging signs that the se¬ nes are reliable This is especially good news with respect to the nineteenth-century income figures, which are based upon Mulhall*s estimates The provisional accepta- Bustelo, Francisco, and Tortella, Gabriel, Monetary Inflation in Spam 1800-1970 in Journal of European Economic History, 5 (1976), no 1 Doblin, Ernest, The Ratio of Income to Money Supply An Inter-National Survey in Review of Economics and Statistics, 33 (1951), no 1 Anderson, Paul S , Behavior of Monetary Velocity in New England Economic Review (Fed eral Reserve Bank of Boston), March-Apnl 1977 137 bility of the Mulhall-Prados6 income figures is buttressed by a series of circumstan- tial facts: first, they seem to tally well with the monetary series; second, they show continuity with the Alcaide7 income series starting in 1901; and third, Mulhall's fig¬ ures for other countries have been vindicated by later research. In the fourth place, while these figures and conclusions augur well for our ability to reach our ends for the period from 1865, that from the end of the eighteenth Cen¬ tury to 1865 appears more problematic. It is very unlikely that we may obtain a yearly series of money supply for that time span. Even decennial figures appear highly im¬ probable. The best we could realistically hope for would be a few scattered estimates permitting reasonable interpolations. This attained, we could make some simple as¬ sumptions about velocity. One of these assumptions, probably the best, would be a li¬ near or exponential extrapolation ofthe trend in our 1865-1972 series. Other possible assumptions could be a fixed V with maximum and minimum intervals or bands, and the adoption of known velocities for other countries in comparable growth stages. If not even this spotty series were available, then a second (or third) best Solution would be just a simple benchmark figure which, in the Friedman-Leff manner, would give us an estimate of the long-term growth rate of income.8 For this, from equation (1) we obtain: y = m + v, (2) where lower-case, dotted letters symbolize percentage rates of growth of the higher- case variables. Our benchmark money figure combined with, say, our 1865 figure, would give us rh, while v would be estimated according to the assumptions mentioned previously. In any case, v would be either negative or zero, so that y < m. This assumption of a decreasing or, at most, constant V is based upon the experi¬ ence of many other countries in their early stages of development,9 and will serve us to discriminate between different possible estimates. For instance, Canga Argü- ellesV0 estimate of a gold and silver currency stock for 1772 of 4,886 million reales (accepted by Sardä11 with little questioning) is a gross overestimate, as our reasoning will show. 6. Prados de la Escosura, Leandro, Anälisis economico del Comercio Exterior de Espana en los siglos XVIII y XIX, Doctoral Thesis, Universidad Complutense de Madrid 1981. 7. Alcaide Inchausti, Julio, Una revision urgente de la serie Renta Nacional espanola en el siglo XX, in: Datos bäsicos para la Historia Financiera de Espafia (1850-1975), vol. I, Madrid 1976. 8. Friedman, Milton, Money and Economic Development, New York 1973; Friedman, Milton, Monetary Data and National Income Estimates, in: Economic Development and Cultural Change, (April 1961); Leff, Technique. 9. See Doblin, Ratio; Anderson, Behavior; Leff, Technique; Cohen, Jon S., Italy 1861-1914, in: Cameron, Rondo (ed.), Banking and Economic Development Some Lessons of History, New York 1972. 10, Canga Argüelles, Jose, Diccionario de Hacienda, 2 vols., Madrid 1833-34. 11. Sardä, Juan, La Politica Monetaria y las Fluctuaciones de la economia espanola en el siglo XIX, Madrid 1948. 138 A simple interpolation of two estimates of national income by Grupo '7512 for 1755 and by Ajthur Young13 for 1792 shows that Spanish national income in 1772 was around 3,700 million reales (no space here to give details about the problems in¬ volved in these calculations; our reasoning admits very wide margins of error). This would make the money supply larger than national income and, consequently, V less than one (around .75 in fact). Such a small V at such early date is unbelievable. For Canga's figure to be correct while V standing at around 3.5 (a very low bound), na¬ tional income would have had to be üwq times larger than our estimate. Among other things, this would imply that income should have grown between 1772 and 1865 at a rate below 0.1 percent and therefore that per capita income should have decreased at a rate of perhaps —0.3 percent between the two dates (this is in current money; the decline would be larger if we allowed for inflation). Such long-term depression is clearly out ofthe question: Canga's estimate should be rejected in spite of his being a respected source of macroeconomic information from his writing days in the early nineteenth Century (I am leaving aside here his highly questionable estimation proce¬ dure). To sum up, our method seems fruitful for our research, both as a way to check the trustworthiness of existing income and/or money estimates, and to extrapolate and interpolate a series. The problems, naturaUy, are less tractable for the first part of our period. Zusammenfassung: Die Schätzung des Volkseinkommens anhand monetärer Variablen am Beispiel Spaniens, 1772-1972 Hiermit werden einige Aspekte des Forschungsprojektes über "Einkommen, Output und Produktivität in Spanien vom achtzehnten Jahrhundert bis in die Gegenwart" vorgestellt. Eine Gruppe von Wirtschaftshistorikern arbeitet an diesem Projekt, das von der spanischen Zentralbank gefördert wird. In diesem Beitrag wird versucht, die möglichen wie auch die bereits erreichten Re¬ sultate darzulegen, die bei der Aufstellung einer Zeitreihe über das spanische Volks¬ einkommen auf der Grundlage von monetären Variablen zu erzielen sind. Monetäre Angaben sind recht leicht zusammenzustellen und liegen jährlich bereits seit 1874 vor. Milton Friedman hat dieses Schätzverfahren erstmals angewandt. Es geht von der grundlegenden Voraussetzung aus, daß die Geldumlaufgeschwindigkeit (der Koeffi¬ zient von Volkseinkommen zu Geldmenge) eine ziemlich stabile Größe ist. Und tat¬ sächlich wird diese Annahme durch empirische Angaben aus einer Vielzahl von Län- 12. Grupo *75, La economia delAntiguo Regimen. La "Renta Nacional" de la Corona de Castilla, Universidad Autönoma de Madrid, Departamento de Historia Contemporänea, Madrid 1977. 13. Young, Arthur, Travels during the years 1787, 1788 and 1789 in France for which is Added the Register of a Tour into Spain, Dublin 1793 (cited in Prados de la Escosura, Anälisis, p. 91). 139 dern bestätigt: Bei nur geringen Abweichungen von Jahr zu Jahr weist die Umlaufge¬ schwindigkeit eine langfristige Tendenz zur Verlangsamung auf. In weit fortgeschrit¬ tenen Volkswirtschaften kehrt sich dieser Trend jedoch um, d.h., die Umlaufge¬ schwindigkeit hat die Tendenz, sich zu erhöhen, und auch dieses nur mit geringen Schwankungen. Die Umlaufgeschwindigkeit in Spanien scheint sich in dieses Muster einzufügen. Unsere Zahlen belegen, daß die Umlaufgeschwindigkeit hier einen Trend zur Ver¬ minderung aufweist. In den Zeitspannen von 1901 bis 1908, von 1914 bis 1917 und von 1946 bis 1951 jedoch kehrte sich als Folge von Kriegseinflüssen dieser allge¬ meine Trend um: Der kubanische Unabhängigkeitskrieg, der Erste Weltkrieg sowie der spanische Bürgerkrieg waren für diese Trendumschwünge verantwortlich. Doch sieht man von diesen Störungen einmal ab, so erweist die relative Stabilität der Umlaufgeschwindigkeit, daß die vorgesehene Schätzmethode durchaus anwend¬ bar ist. Ajn Ende des Artikels werden einige Probleme umrissen, die dabei auf¬ tauchen, wenn man die Methode auf das frühe neunzehnte Jahrhundert anwenden will; denn für diesen Zeitraum sind Schätzungen der Geldmenge nur schwer zu er¬ stellen. 140 Jean Gadisseur Output per Worker and its Evolution in Belgian Industry, 1846-1910 Owing to its crucial role in the process of industrialization,—not only by its techni¬ cal, but also economic and social implications—the threefold relationship capital- technical change-labour is of extreme importance in the explanation ofthe economic development of Belgium during the XIXth Century. The present study aims simply to estimate annual rates of increase in output per worker in the main industries and sectors of industrial activity. It is a preliminary step for a much larger study, which should embrace four aspects of the evolution of industrial productivity: - the technical aspect, including technological and organizational changes as well as progress in skills; - the micro-level approach, focused on the Substitution of capital for labour at the level ofthe firm; - such macro elements as the evolution of comparative costs and prices, the distribu¬ tion of returns between capital and labour; - finally socio-demographic factors ranging from health—the physical ability to work—to working hours. 1. The available data 1.1. The Input of Manpower The numbers of workers and other employees engaged in each sub-division of indus¬ try has been derived and calculated from four sources: a) the Industrial Censuses of 1846, 1880, 1896 and 1910; b) Censuses of Population which classify the population by occupations and profes¬ sions ; c) official mining statistics which contain annual estimates for the extractive, metals and glass industries; d) other sources, including reports of Chambers of Commerce, official estimates and studies of particular industries. The figures available for some branches of industry look sometimes very different. But differences can usually be accounted for by a reference to the definitions and rules utilized by any given source to deal with seasonal employment, unemployment and home workers. The Industrial Census of 1880 has often been criticized because its coverage is not exhaustive and it is clear that for several branches of industrial ac¬ tivity this census does underestimate the work force. Population censuses must also 141 be used carefully because it is difficult to find a corresponding industrial division to their classifications of the work force into occupations and professions. Mining sta¬ tistics are reasonably satisfactory. Although the categories used in this source do not correspond exactly with such integrated industries as iron and steel. A detailed dis¬ cussion of the problems encountered and Solutions adopted would be out of place in a short articie.1 The choices of particular figures or new estimates were made according to a Statis¬ tical criticism of the data, including tests for coherence across sectors and through time. Final estimates are those presented in Table 1. Table 1: The Allocation of Labour by Branches of Industry 1846 1880 1896 1910 Coal Metal Mines Quarries Milling Rice Sugar Sugar Refining Glucose Cocoa Coffee Chicory Margarine Beer Alcohol Tobacco Wool-Preparation Wool-Spinning Wool-Weaving Linen-Preparation Linen-Spinning Linen-Weaving Jute Hemp Cotton-Spinning Cotton-Weaving Saw Mills Woodwork 43,488 102,930 119,246 143,701 8,203 3,810 2,163 . 455 26,007 38,624 39,873 11,384 11,900 11,374 13,134 278 145 102 1,785 11,870 11,237 8,420 696 1,237 1,349 1,786 105 176 267 45 335 1,099 2,577 234 340 360 601 128 1,720 1,640 1,964 360 522 9,558 15,130 20,074 24,397 2,205 2,460 2,077 2,406 7,805 14,530 12,034 15,471 4,800 3,302 2,325 2,688 5,100 11,023 12,942 13,625 20,100 28,158 17,982 10,849 7,000 7,173 10,000 14,000 25,600 14,204 17,668 20,062 25,000 26,500 21,389 12,886 2,321 5,741 1,910 2,765 4,044 3,811 6,984 7,153 8,073 14,736 15,267 18,935 11,929 25,012 7,160 7,582 8,443 10,400 25,702 28,401 39,557 44,260 1. For further details on these estimates readers should consult the author and the reference un¬ der footnote 2. 142 Table 1 (Fortsetzung) 1846 1880 1896 1910 Cabinet Making 3,705 12,629 17,812 23,573 Paper and Cardboard 2,262 7,130 9,575 12,434 Printing 3,591 6,645 14,810 21,308 Leather and Skins 3,113 5,173 5,047 6,774 Leather-Working 12,273 26,861 26,519 29,643 Rubber 15 245 1,235 2,146 Soda and Derivatives 132 987 903 1,639 Vegetable Oils 2,293 2,500 2,879 2,800 Wax and Polish 288 539 852 788 Coke 2,358 2,415 3,737 Coal Briquettes 1,334 1,999 Glass and Crystal 3,729 11,131 23,333 26,182 Pig Iron (Blast Furnaces) 3,288 3,452 3,305 4,214 Crude Iron (Puddled or Converted) 1,646 8,180 4,455 1,064 Finished Iron 1,547 7,689 4,512 2,087 Crude Steel 26 2,156 6,018 13,186 Finished Steel 26 1,678 5,218 10,694 Iron Foundries 1,596 6,693 7,785 9,937 Zinc Manufacture 1,205 3,277 4,970 7,745 Zinc Laminating 704 509 734 Lead Manufacture 134 278 527 727 Desilvering Lead 72 200 1,090 Copper 585 1,355 2,252 3,817 Machinery Download 78.27 Kb. 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