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Transcript
Chapter 10
The Theory of
Economic
Growth
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
Welfare Gains from Growth
• The profound importance of growth comes from
the power of compound arithmetic.
– Even small changes in growth rates make a huge
difference in the standard of living in the long run.
• Example: Korea and Philippines had the same
level of real income per capita in 1965.
– By 2004, Korea’s real income per capita was six times
that of the Philippines thanks to Korea’s rapid economic
growth.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
10-2
Great Questions of Economic
Growth
•
•
•
Economic Growth is the study of the causes and
consequences of sustained growth in natural real GDP
per person.
What secrets did countries with rapid economic growth
like Korea discover?
Why is there a growing chasm between “rich” and
“poor” countries?
– “Rich” countries are from North America, much of Europe, Japan, some of
the successful Asian countries, and Australasia.
– “Poor” countries include much of the rest of the world except for “middle
income” countries like most former members of the Soviet Bloc.
•
What explains the ebb and flow of economic growth?
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
10-3
International Perspective:
The Growth Experience of Seven
Countries over the Last Century
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
10-4
International Perspective:
The Growth Experience of Seven
Countries over the Past Century
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
10-5
The Production Function
• Traditional growth theory divides output growth into two
categories:
– Growth of Factor Inputs that directly produce real GDP such as
capital (K) and labor (N).
– Growth in output relative to growth in factor inputs.
• The Production Function shows how much output (Y) can
be produced by a given quantity of factor inputs and some
autonomous growth factor, A:
Y = AF(K, N)
• In per capita terms, the production function becomes:
Y
K
A f  
N
N
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
10-6
Figure 10-1 A Production Function
Relating per Person Output to per
Person Capital Input
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
10-7
Solow’s Theory of Economic Growth
• We will first study an economy that has no technical change, implying
that A is constant.
• The economy is in a Steady State when Y, K, and N are all growing at
the same rate.
– Implication: Y/K and K/N are both fixed in the steady state.
• Some new variables:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
I = private investment
K = Capital stock
d = depreciation rate  dK units of capital depreciate each yr
K1 = K0 + I – dK  ∆K = I - dK or I = ∆K + dK
S = National saving (previously notated NS)
s = S/Y is the country’s saving rate
k, n, and y refer to the growth rates of K, N, and Y.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
10-8
Derivation of the Steady State
Condition
• At the steady state, ∆K/K = k = n.
• Investment adds to the capital stock (∆K) plus
replaces worn out or depreciate capital (dK):
I = ∆K + dK = (∆K/K + d)K = (n + d)K
• Assuming NX = 0  S = I
• Using S = sY  sY = (n + d)K
• Dividing through by N yields:
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
sY
K
 (n  d )
N
N
10-9
Interpretation of Solow’s
Result
• The LHS gives per person national savings.
• The RHS gives the amount of per person steadystate investment.
sY
K
 (n  d )
N
N
• Thus, in order for the economy to be at a steady
state, the economy must save enough to pay for
the investment required to replace worn out capital
and to maintain per person capital.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
10-10
Figure 10-2 Output, Saving,
and Steady-State Investment per
Person
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10-11
What Affects the Solow
Model?
• A higher saving rate leads to higher
standard of living but not a permanent
higher growth rate of output per person.
• A lower population growth rate leads to
higher standard of living.
• A lower depreciation rate also leads to a
higher standard of living.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
10-12
Figure 10-3 Equilibrium of Saving
and Investment in the Solow
Growth Model
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10-13
Figure 10-4 The Effect of a Higher
Saving Rate on Capital and
Income per Person
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10-14
Two Types of Technological
Change
• Growth in technology in all forms includes better schooling,
improved organization, better health care, and the fruits of
innovation and research.
• Technology that makes each worker more efficient is called
Labor-Augmenting Technological Change.
– Instead of counting the number of workers, we count
N = the Effective Labor Input
• Technology that shifts the per person production function is
called Neutral Technological Change.
– This is represented by the growth of the autonomous growth factor,
A, in the per person production function.
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10-15
The “Solow Residual”
• The per person production function in terms of
growth rates is given by: y – n = a + b(k – n)
(where b is the elasticity of output with respect to K)
• Solving for a yields the “Solow Residual”:
a = (y – n) – b(k – n)
• The Solow Residual is the amount that remains
after subtracting from the rate of real GDP growth
all of the identifiable sources of economic growth.
– a is also known as the growth in Multifactor
Productivity or Total Factor Productivity.
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10-16
Puzzles for Solow’s Theory
• Conflict #1: Income per capita varies too much
across countries.
– The theory implies that a country that is 10 times richer
than a poor country must have vastly greater amounts
of capital per worker (like 10,000 times the amount of
K/N!)
• Conflict #2: Poor countries do not have a higher
rate of return on capital.
• Conflict #3: Convergence has not been uniform.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
10-17
Figure 10-5 A Production Function
Relating per Person Output to per
Person Capital Input
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10-18
Human Capital and Solow
Puzzles
•
Human capital (H) is the value for a person or for
society as a whole, of the extra future earnings made
possible by education.
– The new production function: Y = AF(K, H, N)
•
•
Including human capital suggests that rich countries
having 10 times the per person income of a poor nation
need to have about 12.6 times the combined human and
physical capital.
Including human capital also removes the need for rich
countries to have much lower returns on human and
physical capital as compared to poor countries.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
10-19
Endogenous Growth Theory
• Endogenous Growth Theory attempts to
explain technical change as the outcome of
market activity in response to economic
incentives rather than just assuming that
technical changes happens exogenously.
– Some models have the key to growth being the
development of ideas for new goods, assuming
monopoly power granted by patents and copyright.
– Other models look at the role of international trade in
disseminating ideas.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
10-20
Chapter Equations
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10-21
Chapter Equations
Y  AF ( K , N )
(10.1)
Y
K
 Af  
N
N
(10.2)
k n
(10.3)
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10-22
Chapter Equations
K
k n
K
(10.4)
 K

I  K  dK  
 d  K   n  d  K (10.5)
 K

SI
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(10.6)
10-23
Chapter Equations
sY   n  d  K
(10.7)
sY
K
 n  d 
N
N
(10.8)
Y
K
 Af  
N
N
(10.9)
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10-24
Chapter Equations
General Form
Numerical Example
y  n  a  b( k  n)
y  n  a  0.25  k  n 
a   y  n  bk  n
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
(10.10)
(10.11)
10-25
Chapter Equations
General Form
Numerical Example
Y N  K N 
b
General Form
Y N  K N 
0.25
(10.12)
Numerical Example
K N  Y N 
1b
Y  AF  K , H , N 
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K N  Y N 
1 0.25
(10.13)
(10.14)
10-26