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17:Long-Term Economic Growth What are the long-term growth trends in the United States and other countries? What are the main factors that influence long-term growth? What policies might be used to speed up economic growth? ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Economic Miracles U.S. real GDP per person almost doubled between 1960 and 1995. However, this growth has been uneven with periods of recession and expansion. Incomes in Asian economics have grown eightfold between 1960 and 1995. ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Long-Term Growth Trends Long-term growth is the trend growth rate of potential GDP. ECON Potential GDP grows for two 111 HOFFMAN reasons: MACRO HAPPENS Population growth Growth in potential GDP per person Only the second brings rising living standards. Growth in the U.S. Economy U.S. economic growth averaged 1.7 percent per year between 1895 and 1995. During the 1960s growth was 2.5 percent per year. Since 1973 growth has slowed to 1.4 percent per year due to the slowing ECON of productivity growth. 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS A Hundred Years of Economic Growth in the United States ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Two Extraordinary Events The Great Depression of the 1930s saw a fall in real GDP unlike anything else in the past 100 years. The boom created by World War II was a major expansion of real GDP. However, between 1929 and 1953, growth averaged 1.8 percent a year. ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Real GDP Growth in the World Economy Among the richest countries, the United States and Canada have had the highest real GDP per person since 1960. However, Japan has been growing the fastest - until recently. Africa and Central and South ECON 111 America grew at a slower rate. HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Figure 10.2 page 215 ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Figure 10.2 page 215 ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Catch-Up in Asia Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan are catching up with the United States. China has a high growth rate, but started very far behind the United States and still has a long way to go. Continued growth of China’s ECON 111 economy is important for HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS world gdp for 21st century Note the rate of growth here has slowed in 97.98 ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS The Sources of Economic Growth Societies that do not experience economic growth lack some fundamental social institutions and arrangements that are essential preconditions for economic growth: Markets Property rights Monetary exchange ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Markets Markets enable buyers and sellers to get information and to do business with each other. Market prices send signals to buyers and sellers that create incentives to increase or decrease the quantities demanded and supplied. Markets encourage specialization ECON 111 and trade. HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Property Rights Property rights are the social arrangements that govern the ownership, use, and disposal of factors of production such as: physical property (land, buildings) financial property (claims by one person against another) ECON intellectual property (inventions) 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Monetary Exchange Monetary exchange facilitates transactions of all kinds, including the orderly transfer of private property from one person to another. Property rights and monetary exchange create incentives for people to specialize and trade, to save and invest, and to invent new ECON technologies. 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Specialization and Growth Specialization leads to growth, improving the standard of living. For growth to continue, people must have incentives to pursue three activities: Saving and investment in new capital Investment in human capital Discovery of new technologies ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Saving and Investment in New Capital Saving and investment in new capital increase the amount of capital per worker and increase human productivity. Production methods that use large amounts of capital per worker (such as assembly lines) are much more ECON productive than using hand tools. 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Investment in Human Capital Human capital is the accumulated skill and knowledge of human beings. Investment in human capital is a source of both increased productivity and technological advance. ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Discovery of New Technologies Technological change makes an enormous contribution to our increased productivity. It arises from research and development as well as trial and error. Most technologies must be embodied in physical capital. ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Growth Accounting Labor Productivity Labor productivity is real GDP per hour of work. • Equals real GDP divided by aggregate labor hours Determines how much income an hour of labor generates ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Growth Accounting ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS ECON 111 HOFFMAN Growth Accounting MACRO HAPPENS Growth accounting divides growth into two components. 1) Growth in capital per hour of labor 2) Technological change • Includes everything that contributes to labor productivity growth that is not included in growth in capital per hour Growth Accounting The Productivity Function A relationship that shows how real GDP per hour of labor changes as the amount of capital per hour of labor changes with a given state of technology. ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Growth Accounting The Productivity Function The shape of the productivity function reflects the law of diminishing returns. The law of diminishing returns states that as the quantity of one input increases with the quantities of all other inputs remaining the same, output increases but by ever smaller ECON 111 increments. HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Real GDP per hour of work (1992 dollars) How Productivity Grows 32 25 20 0 30 60 Capital per hour of work (1992 dollars) ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Real GDP per hour of work (1992 dollars) How Productivity Grows 32 PF0 25 20 GDP/HW=A*F(CAP/HW) 0 30 60 Capital per hour of work (1992 dollars) ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Real GDP per hour of work (1992 dollars) How Productivity Grows 32 PF0 25 20 0 30 60 Capital per hour of work (1992 dollars) ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Real GDP per hour of work (1992 dollars) How Productivity Grows PF0 32 PF0 25 Effect of technological change 20 Effect of increase in capital stock 0 30 60 Capital per hour of work (1992 dollars) ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS ECON 111 HOFFMAN Growth Accounting MACRO HAPPENS The Productivity Function Applying the law of diminishing returns to capital, the law states that if a given number of hours of labor use more capital, the additional output that results from the additional capital gets smaller as the amount of capital increases. The one third rule explains how much less. Growth Accounting The One Third Rule Robert Solow of MIT discovered that on average, with no change in technology, a 1 percent increase in capital per hour of labor brings a one third of a 1 percent increase in real GDP per hour of labor. ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Growth Accounting Accounting for the Productivity Growth Slowdown and Speedup We can use the one third rule to study U.S. productivity growth and the productivity growth slowdown. ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS ECON 111 HOFFMAN Growth Accounting MACRO HAPPENS Accounting for the Productivity Growth Slowdown and Speedup 1960 to 1973 • The economy grew due to rapid technological changes. • Real GDP per hour expanded by 39% • Capital per hour increased by 24% • With no change in technology, the economy would have expanded by only 8% (1/3 of 24%) ECON 111 HOFFMAN Growth Accounting MACRO HAPPENS Accounting for the Productivity Growth Slowdown and Speedup 1973 to 1983 • Predominantly, the reason for the productivity growth slowdown can be attributed to a decline in the rate of technological change. • Real GDP per hour expanded by 8% • Capital per hour increased by 15% • With no change in technology, the economy would have expanded by 5% (1/3 of 15%) ECON 111 HOFFMAN Growth Accounting MACRO HAPPENS Accounting for the Productivity Growth Slowdown and Speedup 1983 to 1995 • The economy grew due to more rapid technological change. • Real GDP per hour expanded by 18.5% • Capital per hour increased by 11% • With no change in technology, the economy would have expanded by only 3.7% (1/3 of 11%) Growth Accounting and the Productivity Growth Slowdown ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Growth Accounting Technological Change During the Productivity Growth Slowdown Technology was directed toward coping with two major problems. 1) Energy price shocks 2) The environment ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Growth Accounting Technological Change During the Productivity Growth Slowdown Energy Price Shocks • 1973–1974 and 1979—1980 • Fuel inefficient methods of transportation and production were scrapped at an increased rate • Technological change focused on saving energy rather than enhancing productivity ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS Growth Accounting Technological Change During the Productivity Growth Slowdown The Environment • The 1970s saw an expansion of laws and resources devoted to protecting the environment and improving the quality of the workplace. • These benefits are not included in real GDP. ECON 111 HOFFMAN MACRO HAPPENS