|
Barro, Robert J., and Xavier Sala-i-Martin. Economic Growth.
New York: McGraw-Hill, 1995.
David, Paul A. "Computer and the Dynamo: The Modern Productivity
Paradox in a Not-too-Distant Mirror," in Technology and Productivity:
The Challenge for Economic Policy. Paris: Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development, 1991.
David, Paul A., and Gavin Wright. "Early Twentieth Century Productivity
Growth Dynamics: An Inquiry into the Economic History of 'Our Ignorance.'"
University of Oxford Discussion Papers in Economic and Social History
no. 33, October 1999.
Gordon, Robert J. "Does the 'New Economy' Measure up to the Great
Inventions of the Past?" Journal of Economic Perspectives,
Fall 2000, pp. 49-74.
International Monetary Fund. "Current Issues in the World Economy:
Productivity and IT Growth in the Advanced Economies," World
Economic Outlook, October 2000, Chapter 2.
|
Jorgenson, Dale W., and Kevin J. Stiroh. "Raising the Speed Limit:
U.S. Economic Growth in the Information Age," Brookings Papers
on Economic Activity 1, pp. 125-211.
Kendrick, John W. Productivity Trends in the United States.
Princeton: National Bureau of Economic Research, 1961.
Mokyr, Joel. "Editor's Introduction: The New Economic History and
the Industrial Revolution," in Joel Mokyr, ed. The British Industrial
Revolution: An Economic Perspective. Second edition. Boulder:
Westview Press, 1999, pp. 1-127.
Mokyr, Joel. "The Second Industrial Revolution, 1870-1914." Northwestern
University Department of Economics working paper, August 1998.
North, Douglass C., and Barry R. Weingast. "Constitutions and Commitment:
The Evolution of Institutions Governing Public Choice in Seventeenth-Century
England," Journal of Economic History, December 1989, pp.
804-32.
Oliner, Stephen D., and Daniel E. Sichel. "The Resurgence of Growth
in the Late 1990s: Is Information Technology the Story?" Journal
of Economic Perspectives, Fall 2000, pp. 3-22.
|