Type | Working Paper - World Bank Policy Research WP |
Title | Productivity, Innovation and Growth in Sri Lanka: An Empirical Investigation |
Author(s) | |
Issue | 6354 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
URL | https://innovationpolicyplatform.org/sites/default/files/rdf_imported_documents/productivity,innoation and growth.pdf |
Abstract | This study investigates the impact of key business environment indicators on productivity, innovation, and growth in Sri Lanka through a cluster-level productivity analysis, a firm-level total factor productivity analysis, and a firm-level innovation analysis. For the clusterlevel productivity analysis (as measured by output and value added per worker), it combines two established data sources in a novel way by importing average ‘industry-size-location’ cluster-level business environment variables from the World Bank Enterprise Survey to the comprehensive Sri Lanka Census of Industry productivity data available for similar clusters of enterprises. For the firm-level total factor productivity analysis, it compares data from the 2011 World Bank Enterprise Survey with those from 2004. For the firm-level innovation analysis, it compares findings from the 2011 World Bank Enterprise Survey with a representative sample of enterprises collected as part of the Sri Lanka Longitudinal Survey of Enterprises. The empirical findings highlight the importance—for cluster-level productivity, firmlevel total factor productivity, and innovation—of connectivity to global knowledge (reflected by one or more of export participation, directly imported inputs, foreign ownership, and use of the internet), availability of skills, access to finance, and competition. The paper also presents evidence, under the assumption that the samples are statistically representative, that both allocative and average technical efficiency have improved, with allocative efficiency increasing roughly four-fold between 2003 and 2010, and accounting for the overwhelming share of the aggregate increase in total factor productivity over this time period. Most of the improvement in allocative efficiency has occurred among larger firms, and in large rather than small cities. |