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Chapter 8 7/7/2017 1 Economic growth (8.1) Either: An increase in real GDP (or real GDP per capita) occurring over some time period [(Real GDP year 2-real GDP year 1)/real GDP year 1] x 100 Real GDP per capita = Real GDP/size of population 7/7/2017 2 Growth as a Goal Widely held economic goal Growth leads to an increase in wages & improved standard of living Economy is better able to meet people’s wants & resolve socioeconomic problems 7/7/2017 3 Arithmetic of Growth Small changes in growth make a HUGE difference Rule of 70 Tells us how many years it will take for real GDP to double Formula: 7/7/2017 70/annual percentage rate of growth 4 Growth in the U.S. Since 1950, real GDP has increased about sixfold but the U.S. population has also increased Real GDP per capita has increased more than threefold Real GDP has grown at an annual rate of about 3.5 percent since 1950 and per capita has increased about 2.3 percent Reasons why: Improved products & services Added leisure (standard workweek has shrunk from 50 hours to approx. 35) Other impacts 7/7/2017 5 Uneven distribution of growth (8.2) The different starting dates for modern economic growth is the main cause of the differences in per capita GDP levels seen today Catching up is possible People can adopt technology more quickly than they can invent it Leader countries – inventing & implementing new technology is slow & costly so the growth is smaller Follower countries – can grow much faster because they simply adopt existing technology 7/7/2017 6 Institutional structures that promote growth (8.3) Strong property rights Patents & copyrights Efficient financial institutions Literacy & widespread education Free trade A competitive market system 7/7/2017 7 Ingredients of growth Supply factors Four of the ingredients of economic growth relate to the physical ability of the economy to expand Increases in the quantity & quality of natural resources Increases in the quantity & quality of human resources Increases in the supply (or stock) of capital goods Improvements in technology Demand factor Households, businesses, & government must purchase the economy’s expanding output of goods & services Efficiency factor To reach its full production potential, an economy must achieve economic 7/7/2017 efficiency as well as full employment 8 Production possibilities analysis Labor & productivity – Society can increase its real output and income in two fundamental ways: Increasing its inputs of resources Raising the productivity of those inputs Real GDP = hours of work x labor productivity Hours of work Depends on size of employed labor force & length of average workweek Labor productivity Determined by technological progress, quantity of capital goods available 7/7/2017 to workers, quality of labor itself, & efficiency with which inputs are allocated, combined, & managed 9 Accounting for growth Growth accounting Used by Council of Economic Advisors (CEA) Assesses the relative importance of supply-side elements that contribute to changes in real GDP (i.e. hours of work & labor productivity) Labor inputs vs. labor productivity – When both are increasing, it’s an important sources of economic growth 7/7/2017 10 Technological advance Largest contributor to productivity growth Accounts for about 40% of productivity growth Includes not only innovative production techniques but new managerial methods & new forms of business organization Generated by discovery of new knowledge which allows resources to be combined in improved ways that increase output 7/7/2017 11 Quantity of capital Increased capital explains roughly 30% of productivity growth More & better plant & equipment make workers more productive Some capital substitutes for labor, but most capital is complementary to labor (making labor more productive) 7/7/2017 12 Education & training Human capital Knowledge & skills that make a worker productive Investment in human capital 7/7/2017 Includes not only formal education but also on-the-job training An estimated 15% of productivity growth is derived from investments in people’s education & skills 13 Economies of scale & resource allocation Explains the remaining 15% of productivity growth Reductions in per-unit production costs that result from increases in output levels Markets have increased in size over time This allows firms to increase output levels Able to use larger, more productive equipment 7/7/2017 Use new methods of manufacturing & delivery that increase productivity 14 Improved Resource Allocation Means workers over time have moved from low- productivity employment to high-productivity employment I.E. moving from agriculture to manufacturing jobs to technology 7/7/2017 15 Recent productivity acceleration (8.4) Microchip & information technology Widespread availability of personal & laptop computers stimulated the desire to tie them together (Internet & ecommerce) 7/7/2017 16 New firms & increasing returns Increasing returns- situation in which a % increase in the amount of inputs a firm uses leads to an even larger % increase in the amount of output the firm produces Firms can exploit several different sources of increasing returns & economies of scale More specialized inputs Spreading of development costs Simultaneous consumption Network effects Learning by doing 7/7/2017 17 What can we conclude? Prospects for a lasting increase in productivity growth are good Time will tell if productivity growth will be a long-run sustainable trend 7/7/2017 18 Is growth desirable & sustainable? Antigrowth view Critics state that growth results in pollution, global warming, ozone depletion, & other environmental problems. Also, little evidence that economic growth solves problems such as poverty, homelessness, & discrimination 7/7/2017 19 In defense of economic growth Enables a society to do the following: Improve the nation’s infrastructure Enhance care for the sick & elderly Provide greater access for the disabled Provide more police & fire protection 7/7/2017 20