What is the Solow Residual?

Short Answer

The Solow Residual is the portion of output growth that cannot be explained by growth in labour and capital inputs — it represents Total Factor Productivity growth, which is largely driven by intangible assets.

Full Explanation

Named after Nobel laureate Robert Solow, the Solow Residual was first described in his 1957 paper 'Technical Change and the Aggregate Production Function'. It is calculated by taking total output growth and subtracting the weighted contributions of labour and capital growth: TFP growth = Output growth − (α × Capital growth) − ((1−α) × Labour growth), where α is capital's share of income. The residual — often called a 'measure of our ignorance' — captures all the factors that make production more efficient: technological progress, organisational improvements, better-trained workers, stronger brands, and institutional quality. At the firm level, a positive Solow Residual means the company is producing more output per unit of combined input — it is becoming genuinely more productive, not just deploying more resources. This productivity growth is overwhelmingly attributable to intangible assets. Opagio's calculator applies this decomposition at the company level, making the Solow Residual accessible to individual businesses.

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Related Glossary Terms

Solow Residual Growth Accounting

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