Capital productivity is measured as the ratio between the volume of output, measured as GDP, and the volume of capital input, defined as the flow of productive services that capital delivers in production, i.e. capital services (Chapter 7. ). Series of gross fixed capital formation by asset type are used to estimate productive capital stocks and to compute an aggregate measure of total capital services, in line with the asset boundary of the System of National Accounts 2008 (2008 SNA). ICT capital includes: i) computer hardware; ii) telecommunications equipment; and iii) computer software and databases. Non-ICT capital includes: i) non-residential construction; ii) transport equipment; iii) other machinery and equipment and weapons systems; iv) R&D; v) other intellectual property products.
While the 2008 SNA recognises a number of intellectual property assets (i.e. R&D, computer software and databases, mineral exploration and evaluation costs and artistic and literary originals), other forms of knowledge-based assets such as organisational capital, brand-equity, copyrights and design, can play an important role for GDP growth and productivity. Their exclusion from the SNA asset boundary, and therefore from the capital services measures here presented, relies on the practical difficulties involved in their measurement.
Information on data for Israel: http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/888932315602.