Over the past 20 years, capital services and MFP accounted for the largest part of GDP growth in most OECD countries. ICT capital services represented between 0.2 and 0.6 percentage point of growth in GDP, with the largest contributions recorded in New Zealand and Sweden, and the smallest in Finland and Italy. Growth in labour input was important for very few countries between 1995 and 2016, notably Australia, New Zealand and Spain, while non-ICT capital accounted for almost 40% of GDP growth in Spain and 60% in Portugal. Over the same period, MFP growth was a significant source of GDP growth in Finland, Germany, Japan and Korea, but was negligible in Belgium, Denmark and Portugal, and negative in Italy and Spain.
However, when contributions to GDP growth are analysed before and after the crisis, important differences arise. The slowdown in GDP growth over the period 2010-2016 was driven by the negative contribution of labour input in Italy, Portugal, Spain, and, to a lesser extent, Ireland, and by the smaller contribution of MFP in Austria, Belgium, Finland, Korea, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States. However, over the same period, GDP growth was driven by the larger contribution of labour input in Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States, partly reflecting higher employment rates, and by higher MFP growth in Australia, Canada, Ireland, and, to a lesser extent, Denmark, Germany and Japan.