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Working Paper

Technology and Economic Performance in the German Economy

Authors

  • Siebert
  • H.
  • Stolpe
  • M.

Publication Date

JEL Classification

L5 O3 O4 O5

Key Words

Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity

Economywide Country Studies

Regulation and Industrial Policy

technological change

Technologischer Wandel

Germany remains Europe's largest and most diversified source of new technology, but still lags in the fastest growing areas of today's high technology. After World War II, West-German technology policy sought to rebuild the institutions which had supported Germany's leadership in the high-tech industries of the early twentieth century - automobiles, machinery, electrical engineering, chemicals and pharmaceuticals. Increasingly, however, those institutions are seen as failing to respond to new technological stimuli. In addition, Germany's bank-centered capital and inflexible labor markets have long constrained the opportunities of innovative firms for equity-based growth and the incentives for academic brains to set up in private business. Promising changes in technology policy and capital market conditions can be observed only since the mid-1990s.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Dr. Michael Stolpe
    Kiel Institute Researcher

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