Tatar Taşpınar, Emine Zeren

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Name Variants
Emine Zeren Tatar Taşpınar & Tatar Taşpınar, E. & Tatar, Zeren & Tatar Taspinar, Zeren
Job Title
Dr. Öğr. Üyesi
Email Address
taspinare@mef.edu.tr
Main Affiliation
04.01. Department of Economics
Status
Current Staff
Website
Scopus Author ID
Turkish CoHE Profile ID
Google Scholar ID
WoS Researcher ID

Research Topics

Social Sciences
Economics, Econometrics and FinanceBusiness, Management and Accounting
Economics and EconometricsGeneral Economics, Econometrics and FinanceFinanceAccounting
Housing Market and Economics
Monetary Policy and Economic Impact
Economic Growth and Productivity
Global Financial Crisis and Policies
Financial Literacy, Pension, Retirement Analysis

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG data is not available
Documents

4

Citations

24

h-index

2

Documents

3

Citations

22

Publication Collaboration

Affiliation Name Count
Sabancı Üniversitesi 5
Bahçeşehir University 4
Florida International University 2
MEF University 1
Istanbul Technical University 1
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Data obtained from OpenAlex
Scholarly Output

1

Articles

1

Views / Downloads

2/0

Supervised MSc Theses

0

Supervised PhD Theses

0

WoS Citation Count

0

Scopus Citation Count

0

Patents

0

Projects

0

WoS Citations per Publication

0.00

Scopus Citations per Publication

0.00

Open Access Source

1

Supervised Theses

0

JournalCount
New Perspectives on Turkey1
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Scopus Quartile Distribution

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Scholarly Output Search Results

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  • Article
    Revisiting Labor Productivity Growth in Turkey: Accounting for Relative Prices, Structural Change, and Sectoral Dynamics
    (Cambridge Univ Press, 2026) Tatar Taşpınar, Emine Zeren; Atiyas, Izak; Tatar Taşpınar, Zeren; 01. MEF University; 04.01. Department of Economics; 04. Faculty of Economics, Administrative and Social Sciences
    This study decomposes aggregate labor productivity growth in Turkey from 1999 to 2023 using a chain-linked gross domestic product (GDP) series with an exactly additive decomposition method. Traditionally, this growth has been decomposed into two components: productivity growth within sectors and labor reallocation across sectors. Using the chain-linked GDP series introduces a third component: changes in relative sectoral prices. Although these relative price changes cancel out at the aggregate level, they influence sectoral contributions to overall labor productivity by altering each sector's weight in total output. Incorporating them, therefore, provides a more comprehensive view of sectoral dynamics by capturing their contributions to aggregate productivity growth. On average, the contribution of structural change slightly exceeds that of the within component. However, both the magnitude and composition of contributions vary considerably across sub-periods. During crisis years, structural change contributed positively while the within-sector component was negative. In contrast, during non-crisis periods, aggregate labor productivity growth declined because the structural-change component weakened persistently and nearly vanished after 2018, despite a positive though limited within-sector component. At the sector level, construction, finance and real estate, community, personal, and government services, and transport and communication largely account for the slowdown, while manufacturing's contribution stayed steady; its composition shifted away from within productivity across periods.