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Beyond the Solow Growth Model

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Three Reasons to Go Beyond the Solow Growth Model (SGM) The SGM doesn't fit facts too well ... The SGM Doesn't Fit the Facts. The SGM predicts: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Beyond the Solow Growth Model


1
Beyond the Solow Growth Model
2
Beyond the Solow Growth Model
  • Three Reasons to Go Beyond the Solow Growth Model
    (SGM)
  • The SGM doesnt fit facts too well
  • Saving and Investment Dont Seem to Always Foster
    Growth
  • Technology is only a residual in the SGM
    (technological change is not explained but taken
    as a fact-of-life).

3
The SGM Doesnt Fit the Facts
  • The SGM predicts
  • that growth rates would decline as economies
    approached their steady states
  • convergence - income per person of poor countries
    will catch up to that of rich countries
  • Facts
  • World growth rates have not declined
  • Convergence hasnt happened

4
SGM Predicts Rich Countries Grow More Slowly
than Poor Countries
5
Growth in the United States
Period Annual Percent Change in Real GDP
per Person 1800-1840 0.58 1840-1880 1.44
1880-1920 1.78 1920-1960 1.68 1960-2000
2.20
6
Comparisons of Income per Capita
7
Saving and Investment Dont Always Foster Growth!
  • The SGM suggests that saving and investing cause
    economies to grow
  • The Soviet Union is an exception to the rule
  • The Soviet Union saved and invested a tremendous
    amount of capital in its 80-year history
  • Most of the countries in the former Soviet Union
    have income levels comparable to developing
    countries

8
Explanations for Non-convergence(or conditional
convergence)
  • Differences in the Quality of the Labor Force
  • Education
  • Health
  • Sociological Aspects of Labor (Social capital)
  • Differences in Institutions
  • Increasing Returns to scale

9
Differing Quality of Labor
  • The adjustment for quality of labor makes
  • capital per quality adjusted person smaller in
    developed countries with more productive labor
  • the marginal product of capital in developed
    countries higher
  • The expanded SGM predicts that a developed
    country will grow faster.

10
Higher Education
11
Education and Growth
12
Differing Institutions
  • Social capital is the set of institutions of a
    society, such as degree of trust, customs, laws,
    and civic and government organizations that
    positively affect growth.
  • Social capital provides incentives to produce,
    invest, and innovate.
  • Countries with more social capital generally have
    higher income (growth) levels.

13
Institutions
14
Corruption
15
Rule of Law
16
Foreign Aid and Social Capital
17
Increasing Returns
  • A production function shows increasing returns to
    scale when an increase in all inputs leads to a
    proportionately greater increase in output.
  • Increasing returns production
  • allows continual increases in income per person
  • creates the possibility of a virtuous cycle in
    which growth creates more growth

18
Production Function - Increasing Returns
Production function with increasing returns
Output
A Increasing returns
Income per person
B Constant Returns
Inputs
Time
19
Why Increasing Returns Makes Sense
  • Geographical effects of technology
  • Areas where technology initially develops may
    have increasing returns
  • Hollywood, the Tropics
  • Learning by doing
  • The more one does something, the more productive
    one becomes
  • Textiles in Bangladesh, toys in China
  • Agglomeration effects
  • Concentration of similar firms increases the
    productivity for all area firms
  • Silicon Valley, Liverpool

20
New (Endogenous) Growth Theory
  • New growth theory focuses on the role of
    technology in economic growth.
  • In the Solow growth model, technology is a
    residual (exogenous parameter).
  • In new growth theory technology is endogenous,
    explained by the model.

21
Capital, Labor and RD
  • Capital and labor in the technology production
    function are the amounts of capital and labor
    used in research and development.
  • The more a society invests in research and
    development, the faster its economy will grow.

22
Not-So-New Growth Theory
Adam Smith (18th century) Specialization and
Markets
Not-So-New Growth Theory
23
Adam Smith
24
Specialization and the Market
  • Specialization of labor was the key to growth.
  • Trade expands markets and encourages further
    specialization.
  • Specialization increases output, which increases
    the market, and leads to more specialization.

25
Joseph Schumpeter
26
The Entrepreneur
  • Entrepreneurs are individuals who see
    opportunities to produce and coordinate, manage,
    and assume the risk of production.
  • Entrepreneurs create major technological changes
    and growth.
  • The entrepreneurs industries are leading
    industries that pull the rest of the economy
    along with them.

27
Potential Growth Policies (?)
  • Promote innovation
  • Encourage entrepreneurial activity
  • Make education widely available
  • Ensure political stability and good governance
  • Establish well-defined property rights
  • Protect intellectual property rights
  • Promote aggregate demand policies
  • Establish private enterprise zones
  • Build industrial policies that promote
    technological innovation
  • Lower tax rates
  • Privatize government owned businesses
  • Increase openness to international trade by
    reducing trade restrictions
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