This work proposes a task-based methodology for the measurement of employment and investment in organisational capital (OC) in 20 OECD countries. It builds on themethodology of Squicciarini and Le Mouel (2012) and uses information from the OECD Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC). OCis defined as firm-specific organisational knowledge resulting from the performance ...
This paper sets out a framework for the analysis of public investments, tangible and intangible, at the level of detail needed for the economic analysis of impacts of public policies influencing economic growth. To do this, we broaden the concept of capital in the public sector from that which is mostly tangible (e.g. physical infrastructure) to that which also includes intangibles and long-lasting ...
Valencia:
Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Económicas,
2016,
39 S.
(SPINTAN Working Paper Series ; 9)
| Erika Schulz, Laura Beckmann
Organizational capital (OC) is important for economic performance. To determine the impact on the economic development, it is necessary to measure investment in OC just as well as depreciation of OC. Here we take closer look on the team value as part of the intangibles in the field of organisation capital.
Valencia:
Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Económicas,
2016,
30 S.
(European Policy Brief SPINTAN ; 3)
| Bernd Görzig, Martin Gornig
This paper tests whether intangible capital is a substitute or, to some degree, a complement to standard inputs in the production process. The analysis is conducted for public sectors in which governmental institutions are directly responsible for both, efficiently producing public goods as well as for the investment in new production factors. Knowing the substitutability of inputs is important for ...
Valencia:
Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Económicas,
2016,
25 S.
(SPINTAN Working Paper Series ; 15)
| Alexander Schiersch, Martin Gornig
This paper sets out a framework for the analysis of public investments, tangible and intangible, at the level of detail needed for the economic analysis of impacts of public policies influencing economic growth. To do this, we broaden the concept of capital in the public sector from that which is mostly tangible (e.g. physical infrastructure) to that which also includes intangibles and long-lasting ...
Valencia:
Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Económicas,
2015,
30 S.
(SPINTAN Working Paper Series ; 3)
| Bernd Görzig, Martin Gornig