Title: Infinite-Horizon and Overlapping Generations Models
1Chapter 2
- Infinite-Horizon and Overlapping Generations
Models
2Part A
- The Ramsay-Cass-Koopmans (Representative Agent)
Model
32.1 Assumptions
4Firms
- Large number of profit maximizing firms
- Perfectly competitive on the output side
- Perfectly competitive on the input side
- Owned by households
- Identical, with constant-returns-to-scale
- Cobb-Douglass production is the easiest
- Use exogenous technology, A
5Households
- Large, fixed number of H identical households
- Dynasties
- Households live forever
- Population, L, and household size both grow at
rate n - Everyone supplies 1 unit of labor
- No labor-leisure choice
- Households can own capital, which they rent to
firms - No depreciation (for simplicity it can be
harder to make plausible assumptions that allow a
lot of cancellation in the math if we keep it in
the model)
6Households
- Utility
- U?e-?tuc(t)L(t)H-1dt
- Period/instantaneous utility, uc(t) depends on
current consumption only - Discount at rate ?
- Typically, there needs to be a condition (like ?
gt n) so that utility doesnt go to infinity as
population size increases - Multiplied by household size, L/H
- So it wont be utility improving to beggar
future generations to increase savings today - Infinite time horizon
72.2 The Behavior of Households and Firms
8Firms
- Extensive form production function YF(K,AL)
- Intensive form production function yf(k)
- Capital is paid its marginal product or rental
rate - r(t)fk(t)
- Labor is paid its marginal product. For a
competitive firm, this is what is left over after
paying capital - Wf(k)-kf(k), (this identity is quicker than
calculus) - Actual labor is paid wAW
9Households Budget Constraint
- The household takes r and w as given
- The household is not liquidity constrained
- In general, C W, and ?C ?W
- The size of the household, L/H doesnt affect
anything since both sides get multiplied by it - The household discounts at the continuously
compounded instantaneous rate of interest
R(t)?rdt - The households own the initial capital stock,
K(0)/H
10Households Budget Constraint
- The model doesnt make sense if capital can go to
zero as time goes to infinity - This is why we dont use capital in a Fisher
model with finite time, why would you have
capital at all in the second period? - We require that the discounted value of the
capital stock be non-negative in the limit - lim(s ?8)e-R(s)k(s)?0
11Households Maximization Problem
- Its useful to assume a CRRA utility function
- Consumption for an individual is C(t)
- Instantaneous utility is u(t)C(t)(1-?)/(1-?)
- Using LHopitals rule (that the limit of a
fraction is the same as the limit of a second
fraction comprised of the derivatives of the
numerator and denominator of the first fraction)
we can show that u(t)lnc(t), when ? 1 - This is useful because it is simple, and because
estimates of ? are near 1.
12Households Maximization Problem
- We need to extract the effects of the intial
value of technology - Consumption per effective worker is
c(t)C(t)/A(t) - So,
- u(t)A(t)(1-?)c(t)(1-?)/(1-?)
- u(t)A(0)egt(1-?)c(t)(1-?)/(1-?)
- u(t)A(0)(1-?)egt(1-?)c(t)(1-?)/(1-?)
- Note that A(0)(1-?) is a constant
13Households Maximization Problem
- U?e-?tuc(t)L(t)H-1dt
- Now we need to get the starting value for L out
of the equation using L(t)L(0)ent - So
- U?e-?tA(0)(1-?)egt(1-?)c(t)(1-?)/(1-?)L(0)en
tH-1dt - Extract constants and gather exponents to get
- UA(0)(1-?)L(0)H-1?e-?tegt(1-?)c(t)(1-?)/(1-?
)entdt - UA(0)(1-?)L(0)H-1?e-?g(1-?)ntc(t)(1-?)/(
1-?)dt
14Households Maximization Problem
- It looks complex, but the utility function has a
general form of - UB?e-ßtc(t)(1-?)/(1-?)dt
- Where B A(0)(1-?)L(0)H-1 is a constant
capturing a weighted version of starting
technology per household - Where ß--?g(1-?)n is a composite discount
rate that needs to be positive (just like any
discount rate in continuous time) - This is asserted without proof on pg. 49, but
justified on pg. 53
15Households Maximization Problem
- In the budget constraint
- Total income depends on the wage per worker,
times technology, times population, divided by
the number of households - Total consumption clearly depends on population
and households. It also depends on technology,
although this might not be so obvious. - These can be factored out once we account for
starting capital
16Households Maximization Problem
- Starting capital per effective worker is capital
per household times population, divided by
households. - Divide through by starting technology to get
capital per worker - So, starting capital per household can be
expressed as - k(0)A(0)L(0)/H
17Households Maximization Problem
- Discounted infinite lifetime consumption is
- ?e-R(t)c(t)A(t)L(t)/Hdt
- ?e-R(t)c(t)entA(0)egtL(0)/Hdt
- Discounted infinite lifetime income is
- ?e-R(t)w(t)A(t)L(t)/Hdt
- ?e-R(t)w(t)entA(0)egtL(0)/Hdt
- Factoring out A(0)L(0)/H, we get constraint
- ?e-R(t)c(t)e(ng)tdt k(0)
?e-R(t)w(t)e(ng)tdt
18Household Behavior
- The maximization problem is now fairly simple
- The FOCs are then the budget constraint and
- Be-ßtc(t)-??e-R(t)e(ng)t, for each dt
- Take logs to get
- logB ßt ?lnc(t) log? R(t) nt gt
- Take the derivative with respect to time to get
- ß ?(dc/dt)/c(t) r(t) n g
- Substitute out ß to get the Keynes-Ramsay rule
- (dc/dt)/c(t) r(t)-?-?g/?
19Household Behavior
- The above is consumption per effective worker. To
get consumption per capita we need - (dC/dt)/C(t)(dA/dt)/A(t)(dc/dt)/c(t)
- (dC/dt)/C(t) g r(t)-?-?g/?
- (dC/dt)/C(t) r(t)-?/?
- Either one of these relationships can be thought
of as the Euler equation for the problem
20Household Behavior
- The Euler equation says that consumption will
grow if - The rate of return on capital exceeds the
discount rate - The former is what you get for giving up
consumption - The latter is how willing you are to give up
consumption - If you are not willing to give up some
consumption now, you wont be able to grow. - But, it is only sensible to give up some of your
consumption if you can earn a reasonable rate of
return on it.
212.3 The Dynamics of the Economy
22The Dynamics of c
- We are interested in describing when consumption
is increasing, and when it is decreasing - In order for dc/dt/c(t) to be equal to zero,
the numerator of the RHS must be zero - r(t)-?-?g0
- r(t)fk(t), so there is a single value of k
for which this is true - Call it k
23The Dynamics of c
- For k gt k,
- f(k) , f(k) or r(t) lt r(t)
- This implies that for high value of k that c will
fall - By the same argument, for low values of k, c will
be increasing
24The Dynamics of k
- What will dk/dt look like?
- New investments in capital are f(k)-c.
- The amount of capital that needs to be purchased
to supply new effective labor is (ng)k - So, dk/dt f(k)-c-(ng)k
- This is analogous to the distance between the
sf(k) and (ngd)k lines in the Solow model - Its sort of parabolic
25The Dynamics of k
- Below this curve, k is large relative to c, so k
will be increasing - Above this curve, c is large relative to k, so k
will be decreasing
26The Phase Diagram
- The intersection of the line and the curve is the
steady state - This type of intersection is called a saddlepoint
- A saddlepoint is an equilbrium that can only be
reached along a single path - There is a single path from the bottom-left to
the top-right that leads to this steady state - This is called the saddlepath
27The Phase Diagram
- Is the steady state at the golden rule level of
capital (the one where c is maximized)? - The steady state is where r ??g
- The golden rule is where r ng
- We already know that the composite discount rate
must have -?g(1-?)n lt 0 - This can only hold where ng lt ??g
- This is where the rate of return is higher at the
steady state, or the level of capital is lower
28The Initial Value of c
- There are two rules for thinking about phase
diagrams - Paths that start at points in the same vertical
or horizontal line cant cross - Each locus of points where a variable doesnt
grow can only be crossed going horizontally or
vertically
29The Saddle Path
- Because of the rules for movement in a phase
diagram, there is only one point immediately
before the steady state that will lead into the
steady state - By induction there is only one point immediately
preceding that point that will connect ultimately
to the steady state
30Welfare
- By construction, the equilibrium of a
Ramsay-Cass-Koopmans model is Pareto-optimal - It satisfies the First Welfare Theorem
- Its markets are competitive and complete
- There are no externalities
- There are a finite number of agents (thus the
fixed number of households)
312.5 The Balanced Growth Path
32Properties of the Balanced Growth Path
- It turns out that once the steady state is
reached, the properties of the model are the same
as the Solow growth model where the savings rate
is fixed and sub-optimal - Namely, that growth in per capita income depends
on growth in technology
33The Balanced Growth Path and the Golden-Rule
Level of Capital
- Since the actual golden rule level of capital
where consumption is maximized cannot be
achieved, and - Since the steady state is optimal
- The saddlepath is sometimes called a
modified-golden-rule path
342.6 The Effect of a Fall in the discount rate
35Qualitative Effects
- This section focuses on the discount rate as an
example of comparative dynamics. - The discount rate only effects the dc/dt 0
locus - A fall must be balanced by a fall in f(k), which
can only be produced by a higher k
36Qualitative Effects
- The new steady state is to the right of the
initial one - It will have a new saddlepath as well
- The old saddlepath is now explosive
- Capital cannot jump instantaneously, but
consumption can - So, consumption drops until the new saddlepath is
reached
37Rate of Adjustment and the Slope of the Saddlepath
38The Speed of Adjustment
392.7 The Effects of government purchases
40Adding Government to the Model
- Start out by eliminating just about everything
that is important about government - Government does nothing for utility, or budget
constraints - Those are relaxed in later chapters
- Government does is place a drag on the economy
(it isnt perfectly efficient) - We model this by subtracting G(t) from dk/dt
- This shifts its graph downward
41The Effects of Permanent Changes In Government
Purchases
- A permanent increase/decrease in G changes the
position of the steady-state and the saddlepath - The old saddlepath is now explosive
- Capital cannot change instantaneously
- Consumption can change instantaneously , and it
changes by the negative of the change in G to
move the economy to the new saddlepath
42The Effects of Temporary Changes In Government
Purchases
- A temporary increase/decrease in G cannot take
use to the new saddlepath and then back to the
old one - Since the change is temporary, the new
saddlepath is never there - Instead consumption jumps instantaneously to a
point connected to an explosive path that
intersects the saddlepath at the time when the
temporary purchase cease
43Empirical Application Wars and Real Interest
Rates
- Wars induce temporary changes in government
spending - The temporary transit on an explosive path
corresponds to higher real interest rates - Barro 87 offers some evidence in support of a
correlation between temporary military spending
and real rates
44Part B The Diamond Model
452.8 Assumptions
46Assumptions
Period In Model Period In Model Period In Model Period In Model
Generation Born at 1 2 3 4
1 Young Old
2 Young Old
3 Young Old
- Note that the richness of behavior caused by
having an infinite number of finitely-lived
individuals instead of one infinitely-lived
individual makes OLG models contain RA models
as a special case.
47Assumptions
- The model is discrete
- Agents live for 2 periods
- New agents enter the model each period
- It is the sense in which the number of optimizers
is infinite that gives the Diamond overlapping
generations model its qualitative differences
from the Ramsay-Cass-Koopmans representative
agent model
48Assumptions
- Lt young agents are born in each period
- The rate of population growth is still n
- Agents supply 1 unit of labor when young, and 0
when old - Because agents have finite lives, no limit needs
to be placed on the discount rate of the model - Depreciation rate is 100
49Household Behavior
- An agents income in period 1 is their per capita
wage times aggregate technology, wtAt - Savings earn the exogenous rate rtf(kt)
- This equals the marginal product of capital
- The per capita wage is wt
- Consumption of an old agent is
- C2t1(1rt1)(wtAt-C1t)
- The lifetime budget constraint is then
- C1t1(1rt1)C2t1(1rt1)wtAt
50Household Behavior
- With CRRA utility, the Lagrangian is
- L(C1t)(1-?)/(1-?) 1/(1?)(C2t1)(1-?)/(1-?)
?(1rt1)wtAt-C1t1(1rt1) - C2t1 - Maximization of the Lagrangian yields the Euler
equation - C2t1(1rt1)(-1/?)C1t(1?)(-1/?)
- Since C1t-? - ?(1rt) 0
- And 1/(1?)C2t1-? ? 0
51Household Behavior
- Rearrange the Euler equation and budget
constraint to get a solution for C1t - C2t1(1rt1)(-1/?)C1t(1?) (-1/?)
- C1t(1rt1)C2t1(1rt1)wtAt
- C2t1(1rt1)wtAt-C1t(1rt1)
- wtAt-C1t(1rt1)(?-1)/?C1t(1?)(-1/?)
- (1?)(1/?)wtAt-C1t(1rt1)(?-1)/?C1t
- C1t(1?)(1/?)/(1?)(1/?)(1rt1)(?-1)/?wtA
t
52Household Behavior
- So, first period consumption is a not a simple
function - Let
- C1t1-s(rt1)wtAt, where
- 1-s(rt1) (1?)(1/?)/(1?)(1/?)(1rt1)(?-
1)/? - The saving rate depends on ?
- Increasing in r for ? lt 1
- Decreasing in r for ? gt 1
532.10 the dynamics of the economy
54The Equation of Motion of k
- For aggregate capital
- Kt1 s(rt1)LtAtwt
- rt1 is paid at t1 based on decisions made at t
- Divide by next periods effective labor
- Kt1/Lt1At1 s(rt1)LtAtwt/Lt1At1
- But Lt/Lt11/(1n) and At/At1 1/(1g)
- kt1 s(rt1)wt/(1n)(1g)
- Or, in terms of capital only
- kt1 sf(kt1f(kt)-ktf(kt)/(1n)(1g)
55The Evolution of k
- Because the equation for k includes multiple
functions of k, it can be highly non-linear - This leads to a lot of interesting theoretical
behavior if there are multiple steady-states - For example, if the gross investment curves to
create multiple steady-states, they each have to
be evaluated as sinks, sources or saddlepoints. - In this case, it is possible to have more than
one stable steady-state, and to then rank them as
better or worse so poverty traps are possible.
56Logarithmic Utility and Cobb-Douglas Production
- In this case, the dynamics of k are simple, and
very much like the Solow model
57The Speed of Convergence
- An important difference with this model is that
convergence to the steady state is much faster - See the spreadsheet
58The General Case
- The phase diagram relating kt1 to kt need not be
monotonic - This means there can be multiple steady states
- Some sources
- Some sinks
- Self-fulfilling prophecies are possible
- See the spreadsheet
592.11 The Possibility of Dynamic Inefficiency
- Even though they are competitive, OLG models need
not be Pareto efficient - The capital stock can exceed the golden rule
level of capital this occurs over time so it is
known as dynamic inefficiency. - Recall that the Solow and Ramsay-Cass-Koopmans
models end up with capital below the golden rule
level so it is typically dynamically efficient - This means that everyone can be made better off
by reducing capital and consuming instead
602.11 The Possibility of Dynamic Inefficiency
- In particular, since there are an infinite number
of generations, each larger than the last, it is
possible to - Transfer from the current young to the current
old to make them better off - Transfer from the future young to the future old
(who are the current young) to make them better
off too - Repeat infinitely
612.11 The Possibility of Dynamic Inefficiency
- Dynamic inefficiency is really about
overinvestment in capital - The economy would be more efficient if capital
was cut because consumption would go up instead
of down - Alternatively, the rate of return on capital is
too low
62Empirical Application Are Modern Economies
Dynamically Inefficient?
- Naïve Approach
- Measure the real rate of return and the real rate
of growth (or the nominal rates) - If the real rate of return is lower, then the
economy is dynamically inefficient - The problem is what asset to use
- Safe ones suggest dynamic inefficiency
- Risky ones suggest dynamic efficiency
- Either way, the naïve approach confirms dynamic
inefficiency
63Empirical Application Are Modern Economies
Dynamically Inefficient?
- Better Approach
- You cant be overinvesting if some of your income
from capital is not being reinvested in more
capital - The difference must be going to consumption
- Evidence suggests that capital income exceeds
investment, and therefore economies are not
dynamically inefficient - This means that we do not have to use OLG models
to capture this feature of reality. But, we still
might use them for other reasons.
642.12 Government In the Diamond Model
- The result is similar to the Ramsay-Cass-Koopmans
model - The deadweight loss of government shifts the
capital locus (however graphed) towards lower
capital growth