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Oxford Review of Economic Policy 2006 22(2):186-202; doi:10.1093/oxrep/grj012
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Right arrow L51 - Economics of Regulation
Right arrow O47 - Measurement of Economic Growth; Aggregate Productivity; Cross-Country Output Convergence
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Oxford Review of Economic Policy vol. 22 no. 2 2006 © The Author (2006). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

Regulation and Productivity Performance

Nicholas Crafts
University of Warwick1

Abstract

The paper reviews theory and evidence on the ways in which regulation affects productivity outcomes. In a context of endogenous growth, it is argued that traditional measures of compliance costs miss the potentially most important impacts of regulation on productivity which occur through changes in incentives to invest and to innovate. Recent attempts to measure cross-country variations in the strength of product-market and employment regulation are considered and some weaknesses are highlighted. Nevertheless, consistent with endogenous growth models, there appears to be quite strong evidence that regulations which inhibit entry into product markets have an adverse effect on TFP growth in OECD countries. Although there are some discrepancies in the evidence, on most measures the UK appears lightly regulated relative to France and Germany, and this may have contributed to a reduction in the recent past in the UK's TFP gap.


Footnotes

1 E-mail address: n.crafts{at}warwick.ac.uk


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