Publication | Open Access
Selection, Agriculture, and Cross-Country Productivity Differences
412
Citations
44
References
2013
Year
Resource ProductivityRural EconomyEngineeringApplied EconomicsEconomic DevelopmentDevelopment EconomicsAgriculture SectorAgricultural EconomicsGeneral-equilibrium Roy ModelProductivityEconomic AnalysisAgricultural ProductivityProductivity DifferencesEconomicsAgricultural ImpactAgricultural SystemBusinessLow Income Developing CountryCross-country Productivity Differences
Cross-country labor productivity differences are larger in agriculture than in non-agriculture. We propose a new explanation for these patterns in which the self-selection of heterogeneous workers determines sector productivity. We formalize our theory in a general-equilibrium Roy model in which preferences feature a subsistence food requirement. In the model, subsistence requirements induce workers that are relatively unproductive at agricultural work to nonetheless select into the agriculture sector in poor countries. When parameterized, the model predicts that productivity differences are roughly twice as large in agriculture as non-agriculture even when countries differ by an economy-wide efficiency term that affects both sectors uniformly. (JEL J24, J31, J43, O11, O13, O40)
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