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Background Paper: CBO's Revised Method for Estimating and Projecting Potential TFP 1 (January 2005)

handle is hein.congrec/cbo8502 and id is 1 raw text is: Background Paper:
CBO's Revised Method for Estimating and Projecting
Potential TFP
January 2005

Potential total factor productivity (TFP) is a key input in
the 10-year economic and budget projections that the
Congressional Budget Office (CBO) periodically issues.
This document, which was prepared by Robert Arnold of
CBO's Macroeconomic Analysis Division, describes a
change in the method used by CBO in its January 2005
Budget and Economic Outlook to estimate potential TFP
over history and project its future values. That change in
method is in part a response to new information: A num-
ber of revisions to the data series used to calculate TFP
have changed its estimated rate of growth during the late
1990s-in particular, by slowing the pace of the expan-
sion in productivity that occurred during the 1995-1999
period. 1
An important feature of recent economic performance is
the robust growth of labor productivity and of TFP, both
of which picked up during the late 1990s and have accel-
erated even more since the 2001 recession. Annual
growth of TFP, for example, averaged 0.8 percent during
the 1973-1994 period; between 1994 and 1999, it quick-
ened, climbing to a 1.3 percent average annual rate. That
pickup in growth caused TFP to move above CBO's esti-
mate of its trend and raised the possibility that TFP had
shifted to a new, faster, trend rate of growth.
Understanding that spurt is particularly important to
forecasters who, like CBO, must project the growth of
gross domestic product (GDP) many years into the fu-
ture. If the increase in TFP growth is considered perma-
nent, then projected average growth of real (inflation-ad-
justed) GDP over the next 10 years will be very fast.
Conversely, if the increase is considered temporary, pro-
1. See Congressional Budget Office, The Budget and Economic Out-
look Fiscal Years 2006 to 2015 (January 2005), Box 2-1. For more
details on CBO's method for estimating potential output and
potential TFP, see Congressional Budget Office, CBO's Method for
Estimating Potential Output.. An Update (August 200 1).

jected GDP growth over the medium term will be much
slower.
In 1999 and 2000, before the revisions reduced the extent
of the acceleration in TFP recorded in the late 1990s , an-
alysts sought to understand the reasons for the sudden in-
crease in growth. Although observers still disagree about
its cause, the leading explanations at the time centered on
the role of computers and information technology (IT) in
the U.S. economy. (That focus largely arose because the
acceleration coincided with explosive growth in IT
spending in such areas as personal computers, telecom-
munications, and computer networks.) Some analysts
contended that the acceleration would be permanent, ar-
guing that the expanded use of computers and telecom-
munications technology would allow firms in all sectors
of the economy to reduce costs and improve efficiency
more rapidly than had been possible before.
By contrast, CBO assumed that much of the acceleration
was temporary, focusing more on the production of com-
puters than on their use in its estimation of the trend in
TFP growth. In particular, CBO attributed a portion of
the spurt in overall productivity growth to the faster
growth of productivity in the sector of the economy that
manufactures computers. Much of the increase in that
sector's productivity can be ascribed to the quicker pace
of technological change in the production of computers,
largely as a result of rapid improvements in the quality of
components, such as semiconductors and disk drives.
Those quality Improvements are counted as increases in
output in the productivity measures.
Beginning with the projection described in its Budget and
Economic Outlook for January 2000, CBO began includ-
ing a special adjustment in its estimate of potential TFP
to help explain the late-1990s surge in productivity

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