Productive efficiency, structural change, and catch-up within Africa*

Emmanuel B. Mensah*, Solomon Owusu, Neil Foster-McGregor

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

This paper studies the dynamics of labor productivity convergence and technology catch-up within Africa, shedding light on two important and inter-related issues that are central to Africa's growth: (i) convergence of relative productivity among African countries and (ii) the role of technological change and technological catchup in driving productivity change across and within African countries. We do this by using a nonparametric method to estimate an African production frontier. Productivity change in Africa is decomposed into two components: technological change and technological catch-up. Our results show that Botswana and Mauritius are the only two countries in Africa that have converged to the productivity as well as the efficiency level of the frontier. This successful convergence is driven more by technological catch-up and less by technological change. We explore the special role of technological catch-up by decomposing it into within-sector convergence, between-sector convergence and initial specialization using a structural model (Shift and Share catch-up decomposition). The results highlight the special role of structural change in closing the productivity gap with the frontier. This paper contributes to recent evidence suggesting that countries can climb up the income ladder at a faster rate through a two-pronged transformation - i.e., structural change and technological catch-up.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)78-100
Number of pages23
JournalStructural Change and Economic Dynamics
Volume65
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2023

Keywords

  • O47
  • N1
  • Africa
  • Productive efficiency
  • Structural change
  • Technological change
  • Technological catch-up
  • TECHNOLOGY ADOPTION
  • GROWTH
  • CONVERGENCE
  • OUTPUT

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