Technological Progress and Sectoral Shares
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Abstract
This paper studies the effect of differences in the rate of technological progress between sectors on the
relative sizes of those sectors in terms of revenues. There are two sectors: a stagnant sector, where
productivity does not change over time, and a progressive sector, where costs decrease over time due to
exogenous technological progress. We consider a conjectural variation approach to competition in the
progressive sector which encompasses perfect competition, Cournot oligopoly and monopoly. The main
result of the paper is that the share of the stagnant sector increases over time when demand in the
progressive sector is inelastic. Under perfect competition, when initial production costs in the progressive
sector are sufficiently low (so that demand is inelastic), the share of the stagnant sector rises over time.
Whereas, when initial production costs are sufficiently high (so that demand is elastic), the relative size of
the stagnant sector is U-shaped with respect to time. Under monopoly, the share of the stagnant sector
always decreases over time. However, the decline in that share is much more rapid the higher are initial
costs in the progressive sector. The interaction of market structure and price elasticity (or initial costs)
determines how the relative sizes of sectors differing in productivity growth evolve over time. The
relationship with the cost disease literature is discussed.
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Keywords
cost decrease, productivity growth, sectoral shares, cost desease, 1610E
