Total factor productivity and the convergence of disparities in Japanese regions

Description

Japan’s regional economies face global competition amidst the challenges of a declining and aging population. Given such economic conditions, Japan’s total factor productivity (TFP) requires boosting to achieve competitiveness in regional economies. Although labor productivity is a popular measure for the analysis of productivity and has been a focus of prior studies, TFP’s comprehensiveness is a preferable measure. This study measures TFP using regional data from Japan and tests if the convergence of regional TFP disparities can be detected since 1980. The results show that TFP has continually increased and converged to reduce regional disparities over the study period. We perform statistical analysis of the regional convergence in TFP using a stochastic convergence model and find that TFP converged at each region’s stationary level, not at the nationwide unique level. These results provide policy implications for Japan’s regional economies.

Journal

Citations (9)*help

See more

References(14)*help

See more

Related Projects

See more

Report a problem

Back to top