Research Proposal: Impact of Historical Level of HDI On Contribution of R&D Expenditure Towards Labour Productivity
Research Proposal: Impact of Historical Level of HDI On Contribution of R&D Expenditure Towards Labour Productivity
Impact of historical level of HDI on contribution of R&D expenditure towards labour productivity
Introduction:
This proposed research work will be an attempt towards understanding the contributions of these
mentioned factors in influencing the growth of labour productivity, light of historical HDI level in a
country. The objective will be to verify the hypothesis that historical level of HDI in a country
influences the effectiveness of expenditure on R&D and research propensity among citizens of a
country. The factors influencing the growth of labour productivity in countries with low, medium and
high HDI levels respectively are to be identified and the respective contributions of those factors will
be studied through multiple regression analysis.
Objective:
1) Do the factors have similar contributions in determining the level of labour productivity
irrespective of historic HDI level?
2) If there are differences in weightage, then what are prime areas for low HDI countries to focus
on?
3) What are implications for firms in their efforts to improve labour productivity?
Literature Review:
There have been many studies conducted over the years investigating the growth of labour
productivity and relevance of factors contributing to it. Several factors have been identified that
contribute towards growth of labour productivity, namely, capital stock, development if human
capital and technological progress. Management theories have focused on improving quality and
motivation of human capital, division of labour and process refinement as key drivers at firm level,
with notable contributions from Frederick Taylor (1911) and Henri Fayol (1916). Henry Ford (1922)
was instrumental in implementing mass production by improvement in technology through use of
assembly lines, as well as improving quality and motivation of human resource through higher wages
and reduced work hours. Emphasis on these factors have continued in modern era in management
practices with ICT revolution.
Some of the most influential research in the area from standpoint of growth economics is by Robert
Solow and Trevor Swan (1956) in exogenous growth theory that explains technological progress
being governed through external influences. On the contrary, endogenous growth theory considers
technological progress as governed by internal factors of the economy. Major contributions in
endogenous growth theory are from Arrow (1962), who argued that at any moment, new capital
goods incorporate the accumulated experience. Romer(1986), who considered creation of
knowledge as a spill-over of investment, and Lucas (1988), who argued that investment in education
leads to growth of human capital, which leads to technological progress.
The hypothesis that factors may have varying contribution depending on quality of human capital
comes from these endogenous growth theories that stress on the importance of human capital as a
standalone factor for growth, as well as influencing technological advancements. In a study by Erdil
et al, the relationship between labour productivity and R&D expenditure was analysed for 22 OECD
countries during the period 1991-2003, yielding a positive long-run effect of R&D on labour
productivity growth. In a similar study by Walter McMahon, the impact of education was studied
over 15 OPEC nations, showing a positive result again.
HDI has been accepted as an indicator for human development across the world, and is an index that
incorporates information about 1) Life expectancy at birth, 2) Mean years of schooling and 3) GNI
per capita, thus providing a reflection of quality of life for an average citizen of the country. It is
considered as a segregator so as to clearly differentiate the quality of human capital of countries
under study initially.
Methodology:
To investigate the proposed questions, relevant data will be collected for a set of 72 countries, the
countries will be divided into high, medium and low HDI countries, with 24 countries in each set
( base year 2005 ) to find if the influencing factors are different for each set.
Multiple regression analysis will be conducted on this data for identifying the contribution of
identified independent variables.
Independent variables:
Data Analysis:
References: