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Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Slide 0 CHAPTER 4 The Economy in the Very Long Run: The Economics of Growth Learning objectives Understand that economic growth is due to growth in inputs, and to improvements in technology. Understand that capital accumulates through savings and investment. Understand that the long run level of output per person depends on the savings rate and the rate of population growth. Understand that the basic economic growth model predicts that standards of living in different countries will eventually converge. PowerPoint® slides prepared by Marc Prud’Homme, University of Ottawa Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Growth Accounting Y = AF(K, N) (1) o This chapter uses the Growth accounting equation: A summary of the contributions of input growth and changes in productivity to the growth of output. Y/Y = [(1-) (N/N)] + [(K/K)] + A/A (2) o Total factor productivity: Rate at which productivity of input increases; also a measure of technological progress. Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run o In Chapters 2 and 3, the general production function used was: Slide 2 Growth Accounting Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run Figure 4-1: GDP per Capita for Four Countries, 1820 - 2002 Slide 3 BOX 4-1 Human Capital The higher the rate of investment (physical capital or human capital) the higher the GDP. Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Slide 4 Growth Accounting Year (1-) (N/N) (K/K) A/A Y/Y 19621973 2.1 1.4 1.9 5.4 19741992 1.6 1.1 0.0 2.8 19932002 0.9 1.0 1.5 3.4 Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run Table 4-1: Accounting for Growth in Canada, 1962 and 2002 (Averages) Slide 5 BOX The Post-1973 Productivity Slowdown 4-2 • A measurement problem • Oil price shocks • The pace of innovation slowed Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Slide 6 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run o Neoclassical growth theory: Focuses on capital accumulation and its link to savings decisions and the like. Y = AF(K, N) (1) Assumptions: No technological change and per capita form. Y/N = f(K/N, 1) (4) If y = Y/N is per capita output and k = K/N is the capital-labour ratio, then y = f(k) (5) o Capital-labour ratio: Number of machines per worker. Slide 7 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model The production function y = f(k) is the relationship between per capita output and the capital-labour ratio... Per capita output y … it exhibits two important characteristics: 1) As k increases, y increases, so that the marginal product of labour is positive; 2) Output rises less at high levels of k because of diminishing marginal product of capital. y = f(k) y* k* Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run Figure 4-2: Per Capita Production Function k Capital-labour ratio Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Slide 8 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run o Marginal product of capital: Increment of output obtained by adding one unit of capital with another factor input held constant. Assumptions: No government and no foreign trade, then y=c+I (6) Where c = C/N and i = I/N Assumption: per capita consumption is a function of income, then c = (1 - s)y (7) s is marginal propensity to save and (1 - s) is marginal propensity to consume. In the long run, I = S, therefore propensity to consume. i = sy (8) i = s f(k) (9) Slide 9 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model o Steady-state equilibrium: The combination of per capita GDP and the capital-labour ratio where the economy will remain at rest (i.e. where per capita economic variables are no longer changing.) Assumption: Population growth increases exogenously, then 10) n = N/N, and that depreciation each year equal d, then 11) k = i = (n + d)k and 12) sy = (n + d)k In equilibrium: 13) sf (k*) = (n + d)k* Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run Steady-State Equilibrium Slide 10 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model Per capita output y y = f(k) =c i = sf(k) =i Capital-labour ratio Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Savings is a constant proportion of income given by sk(k). In the long run equilibrium, savings equals investment. The remainder of income is consumption, given that we assume no government and foreign trade. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run Figure 4-3: Consumption and Investment in the Neoclassical Growth Model Slide 11 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model o Figure 4-4 studies the adjustment process that leads the economy from some initial capital-labour ratio over time to the steady state. o Critical element in the transition process: rate of saving and investment compared with the rate of depreciation and population growth. Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run The Growth Process Slide 12 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model Figure 4-4: Steady State Output and Investment y D y* y = f(k) Per capita output y0 (n + d)k C A sy0 B k0 k* sy The economy starts at k0… … saving (A) exceeds investment (B) to hold k constant… … k increases. The adjustment process continues until point C is reached, i.e., the Steady State where k and y are constant. Capital-labour ratio Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Slide 13 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model Figure 4-5: Increase in Savings Rate Moves Steady State y C’ y** C s’y Per capita output Y* f(k) sy (n + d)k K* Capital-labour ratio Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. K** The economy starts in steady-state equilibrium at point C where saving equals investment requirement. An increase in the fraction of income that is saved leads to sy to s’y… …saving is higher than investment required and the capital stock per head will increase until point C’ is reached. Slide 14 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run Figure 4-6: Adjustment to a New Steady State Slide 15 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model Figure 4-7: The Golden Rule May Not be the Steady State Per capita output y f(k) (n + d)k The Steady-State capital stock is at k* but at this level of capital per head saving is too too high. sy The Golden Rule level of capital stock is k** where consumption per head is maximized. s*y To attain the Golden Rule level of capital stock, the saving rate, s, would need to change to s*. The Golden Rule may not be the Steady State. k** k* Capital-labour ratio Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Slide 16 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model (n + d)k Figure 4-8: Exogenous Technical Change y y1 A1 A0 y1 Per capita output A2 sy2 y0 sy1 sy0 k*0 k*1 k*2 An exogenous increase in technology causes the production function and the savings curve to rise. This results in a new steady-state point at a higher per capita output and a higher capital labour-ratio. Capital-labour ratio Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Slide 17 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model o Endogenous growth: Self-sustained growth. o Assume a production function with a constant marginal product of capital (a) and with capital as the only factor. Y = aK (14) o Assume the savings rate is constant and at s and that there is neither population growth nor depreciation of capital. K = sY = saK K/K = sa (15) o Since output is proportional to capital, the growth rate of output is Y/Y = sa Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. (16) Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run Endogenous Growth Slide 18 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run Figure 4-9: (a) Solow Growth Model vs. (b) Endogenous Growth Slide 19 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model o Absolute Convergence: Tendency of both the levels and growth rates of output in different countries to approach each other over time, and for their steady-state values to be the same. o Conditional Convergence: Tendency of growth rates of output in different countries to approach each other over time, and for their steady-state values to be the same. Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run Convergence Slide 20 BOX A Nobel Laureate’s Words 4-4 Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Slide 21 Growth Theory: The Neoclassical Model Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run Table 4-2: GDP Declines in Formerly Socialist Economies, 1989-1994 Slide 22 Growth Policy Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run Figure 4-10: Personal and Government Savings, 1961-2002 Slide 23 Chapter Summary Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run • Neoclassical growth theory accounts for growth in output as a function of growth in inputs, particularly capital labour. • Each input contributes to growth by an amount equal to its factor share times its growth rate. • Long run growth can result from improvements in technology. • Steady-State output per person depends positively on the savings rate and negatively on the rate of population growth. Slide 24 The End Chapter 4: The Economy in the Very Long Run Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. Slide 25