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Title: The US Productivity Slowdown, The Baby Boom, and Management Quality
Citation Type: Working Paper
Publication Year: 2009
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Abstract: This paper examines whether management changes caused by the entry of the baby boom into the workforce explain the US productivity slowdown in the 1970s and resurgence in the 1990s. Lucas(1978) suggests that the quality of managers plays a significant role in determining output. If thereis heterogeneity across workers and management skill improves with experience, an influx of young workers will lower the overall quality of management and lower total factor productivity. Census data shows that the entry of the baby boom resulted in more managers being hired from the smaller, pre baby boom cohorts. These marginal managers were necessarily of lower quality. As the boomers aged and gained experience, this effect was reversed, increasing managerial quality and raising total factor productivity. Using the Lucas model as a framework, a calibrated model of managers, workers, and firms suggests that the management effects of the baby boom may explain roughly 20 percentof the observed productivity slowdown and resurgence.
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Authors: Feyrer, James
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Publication Number: 15474
Institution: National Bureau of Economic Research
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Data Collections: IPUMS USA
Topics: Labor Force and Occupational Structure, Other
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