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What
Makes a Difference in Achieving Higher Labor Productivity?: The Case of
Low-Income Countries in Latin America
Osvaldo Nina
December 2005
This paper uses firm level surveys from Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras
and Nicaragua to estimate the determinants of labor
productivity. This study started out with the hypothesis that the adverse external
business conditions that firms in poor Latin American countries face, may be an
important explication of the generally low levels of productivity. However,
the empirical results, based on the survey of more than 1300 businesses, do not
confirm this hypothesis. Compared to all the variables that are under the
firms control, such as capital intensity, energy use, and worker skills, the
external business environment (macroeconomic instability and labor regulations)
has very little impact on productivity.
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