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Chapter 8 Growth, Capital Accumulation, and the Economics of Ideas: Catching Up vs. the Cutting Edge 1 Chapter Outline The Solow Model and Catch-Up Growth The Solow Model – Details and Further Lessons (Optional Section) Growing on the Cutting Edge: The Economics of Ideas The Future of Economic Growth Appendix: Excellent Growth 2 Introduction In 2006: • China: GDP per capita grew by 10% • United States: GDP per capita grew by 2.3% United States has never grown as fast as the Chinese economy is growing today. Why is China growing more rapidly than the U.S.? • Is there something wrong with the U.S. economy? • Do the Chinese have a magical potion for growth? 3 Introduction There are two types of growth • Catch-up growth Takes advantage of ideas, technologies, or methods of management already in existence • Cutting-edge growth Primarily about developing new ideas China is growing much faster than the U.S. because: • The U.S. economy is on the cutting edge. • The Chinese economy is catching up. 4 Introduction What do we learn in this chapter? • A model based on capital accumulation. Explains catch-up growth. Allows us to answer the following questions: • • Why China is growing faster than the U.S. Why the losers of WWII grew much faster than the winner. How poor and rich countries can converge in income over time. • About cutting-edge growth and the economics of ideas. 5 The Solow Model and Catch-Up Growth Total Output, Y, of an economy depends on: • Physical capital: K • Human capital: education x Labor = eL • Ideas: A This can be expressed as the following “production function”: Y F(A,K, eL) 6 The Solow Model and Catch-Up Growth For now, let A, e, and L be constant so that: Y FK MPK: marginal product of capital • The additional output resulting from using an additional unit of capital. • As more capital is accumulated, the MPK gets smaller and smaller. We draw a particular production function in the next slide where: Y K 7 Capital, Production, and Diminishing Returns Output, Y Y K 3.2 3 3 .2 3 .0 MPK 0 .2 10 9 MPK 1 1 0 1 1 0 Conclusion: as more capital is added, MPK declines. Capital, K 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 8 Growth in China and the United States The “iron logic of diminishing returns” explains why… • The Chinese economy is able to grow so rapidly. It turned toward markets which increased incentives. The capital stock was low The MPK was high. • China will not be able to achieve these high growth rates indefinitely. 9 The Solow Model and Catch-Up Growth Why Bombing a Country Can Raise Its Growth Rate. Also explained by the “iron law”… • Much of the capital stock was destroyed during WWII. Therefore the MPK was high. • Following the war, both Germany and Japan were able to achieve much higher growth rates than the U.S. as they “caught up”. Check out the following table. 10 The Solow Model and Catch-Up Growth Conclusions: 1. Catch-up growth (Germany, Japan) is much greater than cutting-edge growth (U.S.) 2. Eventually the catch-up growth slows down. 11 The Solow Model and Catch-Up Growth Capital Growth Equals Investment Minus Depreciation • Capital is output that is saved and invested. • Let g be the fraction of output that is invested in new capital. The next figure shows how output is divided between consumption and investment when g = 0.3. 12 Output = Consumption + Investment Output, Y 20 When K = 100, Output = 10 Y K 15 10 Consumption = (1- 0.3) x 10 = 7 5 Investment = 0.3∙Y 3 2 Investment = (0.3) x 10 = 3 Capital, K 0 0 100 200 300 400 13 Depreciation Depreciation – amount of capital that wears out each period. Depreciation Rate (d) – fraction of capital that wears out each year. depreciation d K …Or… depreciation = d K 12.14 Depreciation Depreciation 8 Depreciation = 0.02K 6 4 42 Slope d 200 100 2 0 Capital, K 0 100 200 300 400 15 Why Capital Alone Cannot be the Key to Economic Growth As capital increases: • Depreciation increases at a constant rate = d. • Output increases at a diminishing rate. • Investment is a constant fraction of output. At some point depreciation will equal investment. The capital stock will stop growing (steady state). Output will stop growing. 16 Capital Increases or Decreases Until Investment = Depreciation GDP, Y 8 Depreciation = 0.02∙K At K = 400, Inv. < Dep. → ↓ K 6 Investment = 0.3∙Y 4.5 4 At K = 100, Inv. > Dep. →↑K 3 2 0 0 100 200 225 300 Result: equilibrium at K = 225 Y = 4.5 inv. = dep. =4.5 400 Capital, K 17 Capital Increases or Decreases Until Investment = Depreciation Check the Math • At K = 100, Y =√100 = 10 • Depreciation = 0.02x100 = 2 • Investment = 0.3x10 = 3 •Investment > Depreciation Result: K and Y grow. Check the Math • At K = 400, Y =√400 = 20 • Depreciation = 0.02x400 = 8 • Investment = 0.3x20 = 6 •Investment < Depreciation Result: K and Y decrease. Check the Math • At K = 225, Y =√225 =15 • Depreciation = 0.02x225 = 4.5 • Investment = 0.3x15 = 4.5 • Investment = Depreciation Result: 1. Investment = Depreciation 2. K and Y are constant. This is a steady state. 18 Capital Alone Cannot be the Key to Economic Growth The logic of diminishing returns means that eventually capital and output will cease growing. Other factors must be responsible for longrun economic growth. • Human capital: knowledge, skills, experience? • Technological knowledge: better ideas? 19 Increasing Human Capital 20 Better Ideas Drive Long-Run Economic Growth What about Human Capital? • Like capital, it is subject to diminishing returns and it depreciates. • Logic of diminishing returns also applies to human capital. • Conclusion: Human capital also cannot drive long-run economic growth. What about technological knowledge? 21 Better Ideas Drive Long-Run Economic Growth Technological knowledge • A way of getting more output from the same input (increase in productivity). • We can include technological knowledge in our model by letting A stand for ideas that increase productivity. Therefore, let the production function be: YA K 22 Better Ideas Drive Long-Run Economic Growth Output, Y 20 Y ( 2) K 15 ↑Output due to technical change 10 Y (1) K 5 3 2 Capital, K 0 0 100 200 225 300 400 12.23 Better Ideas Drive Long-Run Economic Growth Conclusion: • Technological knowledge (better ideas) are the key to long-run economic growth. Solow estimated that better ideas are responsible for ¾ of our increased standard of living. 24 Check Yourself What happens to the marginal product of capital as more capital is added? Why does capital depreciate? What happens to the total amount of capital depreciation as the capital stock increases? 25 The Solow Model – Details and Further Lessons Let’s review what we know now: • If Investment > Depreciation → K and Y grow. • If Investment < Depreciation → K and Y fall. • If Investment = Depreciation → K and Y are constant. Two important results: • Steady state equilibrium occurs when investment equals depreciation. • When K is in steady state equilibrium, Y is also in steady state equilibrium. These results are illustrated in the next two diagrams. 26 When K Is In Steady State Equilibrium, Y, Is In Steady State Equilibrium Output, Y 8 Depreciation = 0.02∙K 6 Investment = 0.3∙Y 4.5 4 3 The Steady State K is found where investment = Depreciation 2 0 Capital, K 0 100 200 225 300 400 27 When K Is In Steady State Equilibrium, Y, Is In Steady State Equilibrium Output, Y 20 Steady state output Y K 15 Depreciation = 0.02∙K 10 Investment 0.3 K 5 Steady state capital stock 0 100 200 225 300 400 Capital, K 28 Check Yourself In the previous figure: What happens when the capital stock is 400? What is investment? What is depreciation? What happens to output? 29 Increase In the Investment Rate What happens when g, the fraction of output that is saved and invested increases? • ↑g↑K↑Y Conclusion: an increase in the investment rate increases a country’s steady state level of GDP. We show this result in the next diagram. 30 An Increase in the Investment Rate Increases Steady State Output Output, Y 20 Y K 15 Depreciation = 0.02∙K 10 Inv. 0.4 K Inv. 0.3 K 5 Capital, K 0 100 200 225 300 400 31 An Increase in the Investment Rate Increases Steady State Output The results presented in the previous diagram predict that: • An increase in investment rate, g, causes output to increase. • Because labor is held constant, output per capita also increases. Testing the model: • Are its predictions consistent with real world data? • The next figure suggests that they are. 32 An Increase in the Investment Rate Increases Steady State Output 33 An Increase in the Investment Rate Increases Steady State Output Conclusions: • ↑g = ↑ steady state level of output. • As the economy moves from the lower to the higher steady state output → ↑ growth rate of output • This higher growth rate is temporary. • ↑investment rate → ↑ steady state level of output but not its long-run growth rate. • These points are illustrated in following case study of South Korea. 34 An Increase in the Investment Rate Increases Steady State Output The Case of South Korea • In 1950, South Korea was poorer than Nigeria. • 1950s: the investment rate was < 10%. • 1970s: Investment rate more than doubled. • 1990s: Investment rate increased to over 35%. • South Korea’s GDP increased rapidly. • As GDP reached Western levels, the growth rate has slowed. 35 An Increase in the Investment Rate Increases Steady State Output Favorable Incentives and institutions Savings must be efficiently collected and used. • Soviet Union had a high saving rate, but savings were not invested well. • This made the “effective” investment rate very low. A country can have a low saving rate but a high investment rate by importing savings. 36 The Solow Model and Conditional Convergence Conditional Convergence – Among countries with similar steady state levels of output, poorer countries grow faster than richer countries. A country will grow faster the farther its capital stock is below its steady state value. The next figure presents evidence of convergence. 37 Conditional Convergence 38 From Catching Up to Cutting Edge Several predictions of Solow model are consistent with the evidence. • Countries with higher investment rates have higher GDP per capita. • Countries grow faster the farther their capital stock is from the steady state level. One prediction is not consistent with the evidence: • Steady state: Long-run growth = 0 39 From Catching Up to Cutting Edge What explains the observed long-run growth? • Generation of ideas results in long-run economic growth. Let’s see how this works: • New ideas → ↑A → ↑Output at every level of K • ↑ Output → ↑Investment → Investment > Depreciation →↑ K→ ↑ Output (movement along new production function). • As ideas continue to grow, output continues to grow. Let’s use the model to see this. 40 Solow and the Economics of Ideas in One Diagram Output, Y Effect of ↑A from 1 to 1.5 c 33.7 Output ↑ b Better Ideas 15 Y (1.5) K a Y (1) K Dep. = 0.02∙K Inv . 0.3(1.5) K Inv . 0.3(1) K 225 506 Capital, K 41 Check Yourself What happens to investment and depreciation at the steady state level of output? In the previous figure, how much is consumed in the old steady state? How much is consumed in the new steady state? 42 Check Yourself Do countries grow faster if they are far below their steady state or if they are close? Do countries with higher investment rates have lower or higher GDP per capita? 43 Growing on the Cutting Edge: The Economics of Ideas The United States, Japan, and Western Europe are on the cutting edge of economic growth. To keep this growth up these countries must continue to develop new ideas. Conclusion: The economics of ideas becomes the key to understanding growth on the cutting edge. 44 Growing On The Cutting Edge: The Economics of Ideas Research and Development Is Investment For Profit Spillovers mean that ideas are underprovided. Government has a role in improving the production of ideas. The larger the market, the greater the incentive to research and develop new ideas. Let’s look at each of these in turn. 45 Research and Development Is Investment For Profit Keys to increasing technological knowledge: • Incentives • Institutions that encourage investment in physical and human capital and R&D. Property rights honest government political stability a dependable legal system competitive open markets 46 Research and Development Is Investment For Profit Not just the number of scientists and engineers that is important All kinds of people come up with new ideas. Business culture and institutions Institutions that are especially important: • Commercial settings that help innovators to connect with capitalists • Intellectual property rights • A high-quality education system Let’s look at each of these in turn. 47 Research and Development Is Investment For Profit A commercial setting that helps innovators connect with capitalists. • Ideas without financial backers are sterile. • The U.S. is good at connecting innovators with businessmen and venture capitalists. • American culture supports entrepreneurs: People like Apple CEO Steve Jobs are lauded in the popular media. Contrast this to the treatment of 18th century British entrepreneur John Kay. 48 Research and Development Is Investment For Profit John Kay (1704-1780) invented the “flying shuttle” used in cotton weaving, the single most important invention launching the industrial revolution. Kay, however, was not rewarded for his efforts. His house was destroyed by “machine breakers,” who were afraid that his invention would put them out of a job. Kay was forced to flee to France where he died a poor man. 49 Research and Development Is Investment For Profit Patents • New processes, products, and methods can be copied by competitors. World’s first MP3 player was the Eiger Labs MPMan introduced in 1998. Copied by other firms and Eiger Labs lost out • Patents Can slow down spread of technology. Trade-off between creating incentives to research and develop new products and avoiding too much monopoly 50 Spillovers, and Why There Aren’t Enough Good Ideas Non-rivalrous – A good that two or people can consume at the same time. Ideas are non-rivalrous. • The spillover or diffusion of new ideas generates widespread economic growth. • Implication: Too few ideas are generated. Let’s see why. 51 Spillovers, and Why There Aren’t Enough Good Ideas Optimal social investment in R&D occurs where: MSB = MSC Optimal private investment occurs where MPB = MPC With spillover benefits: MSB = MPB + spillovers so that MSB > MPB Result: Optimal Private Investment in R&D < Optimal Social Investment in R&D 52 Spillovers Mean Too Little Investment in Research and Development $ Spillover benefits IP = optimal private investment in R&D IS =optimal social investment in R&D MPC = MSC MPB = MPC MSB = MSC Assumes there MSB are no spillover costs MPB IP IS Quantity of R&D 53 Government’s Role in the Production of Ideas Ideas in mathematics, physics, and molecular biology have many applications so spillovers can be large. • Problem: Even if the social benefits are large, the private benefits can be small. • Solution: Subsidize the production of new ideas or give tax breaks for R&D. Both shift the MC of R&D curve down → ↑ R&D investment. Let’s see this. 54 Spillovers Mean Too Little Investment in Research and Development $ MPC = MSC MPB = MPC MSB = MSC MSB MPB IP IS Quantity of R&D 55 Spillovers, and Why There Aren’t Enough Good Ideas Large spillovers to basic science suggest a role for government subsidies to universities. • Especially those parts of the universities that produce innovations and the basic science behind those innovations. • Universities produce scientists Most of the 1.3 million scientists were trained in government subsidized universities. 56 Market Size and Research and Development Innovations like pharmaceuticals, new computer chips, software, and chemicals require large R&D expenditures. Companies will avoid investing in innovations with small potential markets. Larger markets mean increased rewards (thus incentives) for R&D. As the world market grows, companies will increase their R&D investments. 57 Check Yourself What would happen to the incentive to produce new ideas if all countries imposed high tax rates on imports? What are spillovers, and how do they affect the production of ideas? 58 Check Yourself Some economists have proposed that the government offer large cash prizes for the discovery of cures for diseases like malaria that affect people in developing countries. What economic reasons might there be to support a prize for malaria research rather than, say, cancer research? 59 The Future of Economic Growth Over the last 10,000 years per capita world GDP has been growing. • Dawn of civilization to about 1500: growth = 0% • AD 1500 – 1760: growth = 0.08% • Growth doubled in next 100 years. • Increased even further during the 19th and 20th centuries. • Today: world wide growth of per capita GDP = 2.2% 60 The Future of Economic Growth Economic growth can be even faster • A (ideas) = Population x Incentives x Ideas/Hour • Population ↑population → ↑ number of people with new ideas Much of the world is poor; thousands of potentially great scientists are laboring in menial jobs. • As the world gets richer → ↑ production of ideas → everyone benefits 61 The Future of Economic Growth Incentives appear to be increasing • Consumers are richer • Markets are expanding due to trade • World-wide improvement in institutions Property rights Honest government Political stability Dependable legal system 62 The Future of Economic Growth Ideas per Hour • New ideas do not experience diminishing returns. • Two reasons why this is so. Many ideas make creating new ideas easier. The field of ideas that can be explored is so large that diminishing returns may not set in for a very long time. 63 Takeaway As K accumulates, the MPK declines until investment = depreciation, and growth stops. The Solow model tells us three things: • Countries that have higher investment rates will be wealthier. • Growth will be faster the further away a country’s capital stock is from its steady state value. • Capital accumulation cannot explain long-run economic growth. 64 Takeaway New ideas are the driving force behind long-run economic growth. • Ideas create spillover benefits. • Spillover benefits means that the originator of the new idea will not receive all of the benefits. • In order to achieve the optimal number of ideas, government can support production of new ideas… By protecting intellectual property. By subsidizing production of new ideas. 65 Takeaway There is a trade-off between providing appropriate incentives to produce new ideas and providing appropriate incentives to share new ideas. The larger the size of the market, the greater the incentive to invest in R&D. 66 Takeaway More people and wealthier countries increase the number of people devoted to the production of new ideas. The increased wealth of many developing nations, the move to freer trade, and the spread of better institutions all encourage the future of economic growth. 67 End of Chapter 8 Second Edition 68 Appendix Excellent Growth 69 Excellent Growth Using a spreadsheet, you can easily explore the Solow model and duplicate all the graphs. First, calculate the increasing capital stock using the formula in A3 and let the spreadsheet do the rest. Note: Clicking on the lower right corner of a cell and dragging it down will duplicate the formula in the 70 lower cells. 12.70 Excellent Growth Second, calculate output, Y, using the formula: Y K Investment and depreciation can be calculated using: I gY depreciation dK You may use any values for g and d you wish. 71 12.71 Excellent Growth 72 Excellent Growth Third, graphs can be created using the data generated 73 In the steps one through three. 12.73 Excellent Growth Lastly, you can experiment with different investment shares in E2 or the depreciation rates in F2. 74 12.74 The Mathematics of Economic Growth Objective: To see how economic growth varies along the transition path to a new steady state equilibrium. We will do two things: • Outline the mathematics. • Use a spreadsheet to visualize our results. 75 12.75 The Mathematics of Economic Growth Recall 1 2 Investment gY γ K γK ( e.g., 0.3 K ) Depreciation dK( e.g., 0.02 K ) By thus 1 2 ΔK Investment - Depreci ation gK dK The growth rate of the capital stock is given by 1 2 ΔK gK dK g Growth rate of K 1 d K K K K2 Implicatio n : g If d Growth rate of K is positive 1 K2 g d Growth rate of K is negative 1 K2 plotting these two expressions separately on a graph, we can see how the steady state changes with the values of the investment rate and depreciation rate. 76 12.76 The Mathematics d, g/K1/2 0.08 0.07 0.06 Difference is the growth rate of the capital stock. The bigger the difference the faster K grows. 0.05 0.04 0.03 d = 0.02 0.02 0.01 0.4/K1/2 400 Capital, K 77 77