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The division of labor and economic development
The division of labor and economic development

... 1994; Sachs and Warner, 1995). This paper considers another possible explanation: it builds a model to show how an economy with a low division of labor may be stuck in an underdevelopment trap, where both wages and the rate of return to capital are low so that there may be no incentives for foreign ...
(AS) Curve
(AS) Curve

... Wages are a large fraction of total costs and wage changes lag behind price changes. This gives us an upward sloping short-run AS curve. ...
here - Hans-Böckler
here - Hans-Böckler

... The economic logic of the model is as follows. Given the structure of the economy (as described by the equations of the model) and the exogenous variables, agents form rational expectations of the model’s implied equilibrium solutions and equilibrium price level. Given the non-stochastic nature of t ...
Nominal Rigidities and the Effects of Government Spending Shocks
Nominal Rigidities and the Effects of Government Spending Shocks

Yes, Virginia, there is a poverty trap
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NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES DYNAMIC GLOBALIZATION AND ITS POTENTIALLY ALARMING PROSPECTS
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES DYNAMIC GLOBALIZATION AND ITS POTENTIALLY ALARMING PROSPECTS

... Hong Kong, and Korea. It also posited just one good produced with capital and a one type of labor. This single labor input comprised the sum of effective units of labor supplied by workers with low, middle, and high labor-efficiency coefficients. The basic message of this earlier work is that high- ...
Internationalized Production in a Small Open Economy Aur´ elien Eyquem G¨
Internationalized Production in a Small Open Economy Aur´ elien Eyquem G¨

... Recently the New Keynesian synthesis models have been extensively applied to the study of monetary policy in small open economies.1 These models, enriched with many frictions (habit in consumption, price and wage indexation), also became the workhorse of empirical studies. Most of these models assum ...
Rosa Luxemburg on Capitalist Dynamics
Rosa Luxemburg on Capitalist Dynamics

... commodities with money, at the expected prices) the surplus value; and thus validating the increasing share of investment which must be forthcoming if the initial realization crisis must be postponed. The present and future wage-earners, of course, provide part of consumption demand buying subsisten ...
(Closed Economy) Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium Model
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Analytical Articles. The natural interest rate: concept, determinants
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PDF
PDF

... of the United States (Jorgenson, Gollop, and Fraumeni). However, significant differences exist in its contribution to the growth of various sectors of the economy. Capital contributed less than 3%to the growth in agricultural output, while it accounted for about one-third and one-fourth of the growt ...
AND BUSINESS FLUCTUATIONS Mark Gertler Working Paper No. 2015
AND BUSINESS FLUCTUATIONS Mark Gertler Working Paper No. 2015

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MICHAL KALECKI
MICHAL KALECKI

... will not necessarily imply a fall in profits. Indeed, if wages grow, and prices do not increase (or if they increase in a lower proportion), capitalists will not immediately reduce their real expenditure. Thus, as capitalist expenditure does not fall, their profits will not be reduced either. The co ...
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The mysrery of real wage

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Capital-Skill Complementarity and Economic Development

... tend to exhibit rapid capital deepening. Capital accumulation in these countries, however, does not proceed as predicted by the standard growth model: we observe investment rates that start low, then increase over time and finally decline. We also observe that investment in physical capital tends to ...
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER VIII

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NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES IMPLICATIONS FOR FISCAL POLICY AND CROSS-COUNTRY DIFFERENCES

... This paper evaluates optimal public investment and fiscal policy for countries characterized by limited tax and debt capacities. We study a non stochastic CRS endogenous growth model where public expenditure is an input in the production process, in countries where distortions and limited enforceabi ...
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES TARIFFS, EMPLOYMENT AND THE CURRENT ACCOUNT:
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES TARIFFS, EMPLOYMENT AND THE CURRENT ACCOUNT:

... A further problem with the macroeconomic literature on tariff policy is that its conclusions on CA effects are based on models incorporating arbitrary static savings functions, not a very meaningful procedure in an analysis of a clearly intertemporal issue such as current account behavior. An elegan ...
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES DETERIORATION OF THE TERMS OF TRADE AND
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... constant, the ultimate attainment of a steady state is possible if and only if S — It ...
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“Third persons” and reproduction

... the population according to Marx’s diagram, the capitalists and the workers. The natural increase of the former is already catered for by that part of the surplus value which is consumed inasmuch as it increases in absolute quantity. (…) The question is therefore whether the natural increase of the ...
Wicksell after Woodford
Wicksell after Woodford

Estimating the Indian Natural Interest Rate and Evaluating Policy
Estimating the Indian Natural Interest Rate and Evaluating Policy

... as a proxy for shocks to subsistence consumption. Their persistence should also be taken into account. They are likely to be more persistent the higher is their impact, β3 , on core inflation. 4. There were some issues in convergence, so that additional structure had to be imposed as suggested by Ca ...
THE EFFECT OF INTEREST RATE, INFLATION RATE, GDP, ON
THE EFFECT OF INTEREST RATE, INFLATION RATE, GDP, ON

... conducting new monetary policies. Engen and Hubbard ( 2004): Researchers have determined that an increase in federal government debt equivalent to one percent of GDP, all else equal, would be expected to increase the long-term real rate of interest by about three basis points. Giovanni and Shambaugh ...
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Okishio's theorem

Okishio's theorem is a theorem formulated by Japanese economist Nobuo Okishio. It has had a major impact on debates about Marx's theory of value. Intuitively, it can be understood as saying that if one capitalist raises his profits by introducing a new technique that cuts his costs, the collective or general rate of profit in society – for all capitalists – goes up.Okishio [1961] establishes this theorem under the assumption that the real wage – the price of the commodity basket which workers consume – remains constant. Thus, the theorem isolates the effect of 'pure' innovation from any consequent changes in the wage.For this reason the theorem, first proposed in 1961, excited great interest and controversy because, according to Okishio, it contradicts Marx's law of the tendency of the rate of profit to fall. Marx had claimed that the new general rate of profit, after a new technique has spread throughout the branch where it has been introduced, would be lower than before. In modern words, the capitalists would be caught in a rationality trap or prisoner's dilemma: that which is rational from the point of view of a single capitalist, turns out to be irrational for the system as a whole, for the collective of all capitalists. This result was widely understood, including by Marx himself, as establishing that capitalism contained inherent limits to its own success. Okishio's theorem was therefore received in the West as establishing that Marx's proof of this fundamental result was inconsistent.More precisely, the theorem says that the general rate of profit in the economy as a whole will be higher if a new technique of production is introduced in which, at the prices prevailing at the time that the change is introduced, the unit cost of output in one industry is less than the pre-change unit cost. The theorem, as Okishio (1961:88) points out, does not apply to non-basic branches of industry.The proof of the theorem may be most easily understood as an application of the Perron–Frobenius theorem. This latter theorem comes from a branch of linear algebra known as the theory of nonnegative matrices. A good source text for the basic theory is Seneta (1973). The statement of Okishio's theorem, and the controversies surrounding it, may however be understood intuitively without reference to, or in-depth knowledge of, the Perron–Frobenius theorem or the general theory of nonnegative matrices.
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