It is now well known that after 1995, labor productivity (LP, or output per hour) in the United States doubled its anemic 1.3 percent average annual growth between 1973 and 1995 (see chart). Labor productivity in the services industries also accelerated after 1995.

As we documented in a longer version of this paper (Triplett and Bosworth forthcoming), labor productivity growth in the services industries after 1995 was a broad acceleration, not just confined to one or two industries, as has sometimes been supposed. Using the 1977-95 period as the base, we showed that fifteen of twenty-two U.S. two-digit services industries experienced productivity acceleration. Both the rate of LP improvement in services after 1995 and its acceleration equaled the economywide average. That is why we said "Baumol's Disease has been cured."

We also examined the sources of labor productivity growth. The major source of the LP acceleration in services industries was a great expansion in services industry multifactor productivity (MFP) after 1995. It went from essentially zero in the earlier period to 1.4 percent per year, on a weighted basis. As MFP is always a small number, that is a huge expansion. Information technology (IT) investment played a substantial role in LP growth, but its role in the acceleration was smaller, mainly because the effect of IT in these services industries is already apparent in the LP numbers before 1995. Purchased intermediate inputs also made a substantial contribution to labor productivity growth, especially in the services industries that showed the greatest acceleration. This finding reflects the role of "contracting out" in improving efficiency.