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ITFD Growth and Development

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Title: ITFD Growth and Development


1
ITFD Growth and Development
  • LECTURE SLIDES SET 6
  • Professor Antonio Ciccone

2
Ideas and Economic Growth
3
Producing output versus ideas
  • Ideas non-rival, accumulable input
  • Ideas may be excludable (patents, secrecy) or
    not
  • Ideas producing them lowers current, but
    increases future output

4
Producing output versus ideas
  • Question 1 what is the growth process for a
    given allocation of inputs between producing
    output and producing ideas?
  • ? Characterize the join evolution of ideas and
    output in the spirit of Solow

5
Producing output versus ideas
  • Question 2 how much of inputs is allocated to
    producing ideas in decentralized equilibrium?
  • Difficulties
  • In these models there are at least 3 inputs
    capital, labor, and ideas
  • Holding ideas constant, our reproduction
    argument implies that there are at least
    constant returns to capital (K) and labor (L)
  • HENCE, there are increasing returns to K,L, and
    ideas!
  • ? It took quite a while to develop a set of
    models (toolbox) where the decentralized
    dynamic general equilibrium could be characterized

6
1. A FRAMEWORK FOR ANALYZING GROWTH WITH RESEARCH
AND DEVELOPMENT
  • Quantity of output produced
  • fraction of total capital stock used in
    production
  • fraction of total labor force used in
    production

taken to be exogenous in the spirit of Solow
7
  • level of technology
  • stock of ideas
  • ideas non-rival inputs
  • new ideas, which are created by using
    capital, labor, and old ideas in the RESEARCH AND
    DEVELOPMENT (RD) process

8
  • Production of new ideas
  • Research and Development (RD) technology
  • fraction of total capital stock used in RD
  • fraction of total labor force used in RD

taken to be exogenous this is in the spirit of
Solow
9
  • Returns to scale to K and L in production of
    IDEAS could be increasing or decreasing
  • DECREASING replicating inputs could lead to same
    discoveries being made twice
  • INCREASING doubling inputs could lead to more
    than twice the discoveries because of
    interactions among researchers (the whole is
    more than sum of its parts)

10
  • Also, what is the link between stock of ideas and
    new ideas?
  • presumably OLD ideas are useful for developing
    new ideas
  • doubling stock, doubles discoveries holding
    inputs L and K constant
  • effect of stock of ideas on creation less
    than proportional
  • effect of stock of ideas on creation more
    than proportional

11
  • q1 ideas keep growing at same rate even if
    resources allocated to RD constant
  • qgt1 growth of ideas accelerates when resources
    allocated to RD constant
  • qlt1 to keep growth of ideas constant, more and
    more resources must be allocated to RD

12
2. GROWTH WITH RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT THE CASE
WITHOUT CAPITAL
  • Quantity of output produced
  • Production of new ideas
  • Population growth (exogenous)

13
Growth of ideas ( )
14
CASE 1 Balanced (constant) growth path
15
  • Is the BGP stable?
  • Graph on the vertical axis against on the
    horizontal axis
  • Check that is increasing when below and
    decreasing when above

16
STABILITY OF BGP
0
17
  • Note that implies that a faster population
    growth n translates into faster growth of ideas
    in the balanced growth path.
  • Is there empirical support for the positive
    relationship between n and the long run growth
    rate?
  • ? Hard to test as we need long time series for
    that but Michael Kremer 1993, QJE used
    population growth data going back to 1 Million
    B.C.

18
  • Why does an increase in not raise the long
    run growth rate?
  • Reason analogous to why increase in savings rate
    s in the Solow model does not increase long run
    growth Decreasing returns
  • Note that yielded
  • Increase in al increase the short-run growth rate
    of ideas
  • But when qlt1 we get that maintaining the same
    growth rate of ideas becomes harder and harder as
    the stock of idea increases (fishing out the
    pond effect)
  • In the long-run we get a level effect only
  • ? The fraction of resources allocated to RD is
    IRRELEVANT for long-run growth rate !!

19
  • IMPORTANT TO NOTE
  • Balanced growth path growth rate
  • there can only be long run growth of ideas and
    output if
  • ngt0
  • if n0, there is NO long run growth

20
RD and endognous growth
  • Hence, there can be long run growth even without
    exogenous technological progress
  • BUT the growth rate is linked to population
    growth, which we dont usually think of as a
    policy parameter

21
  • CASE 2
  • Hence implies ever accelerating growth

22
  • In this case, a small increase in ends up
    having a very large effect on the stock of ideas
    in the long run
  • An increase in implies
  • short term increase in growth of ideas (as
    before)
  • these additional ideas further increase the
    growth of ideas when
  • ? for any future time t, the growth rate will be
    higher after the increase in

23
CASE 3
  • NOW, there is long run growth even if n0!!!

24
3. GROWTH WITH RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT THE CASE
WITH CAPITAL
  • Quantity of output produced
  • Production of new ideas

25
  • standard assumptions of Solow model
  • constant savings rate s
  • constant population growth rate n
  • no depreciation of capital

26
The idea and capital growth equations
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29
CASE 1 (i.e. or )
-ISOCLINE ( )
  • Above this line falls
  • Below this line increases

30
-ISOCLINE ( )
  • Above this line falls
  • Below this line increases

31
ISOCLINES in GROWTH RATES space
0
32
EVOLUTION OF GROWTH RATES
0
33
DYNAMICS
0
34
DYNAMICS plus INITIAL CONDITION
STARTING POINT
0
35
Starting point of dynamical system is GIVEN by
INITIAL capital, technology, and labor force
36
  • IMPORTANT TO NOTE
  • there can only be long run growth of ideas,
    capital, and output if
  • ngt0
  • if n0, there is NO long run growth

37
  • CASE 2
  • we are interested in whether IN THIS CASE there
    will be long run growth even if n0
  • hence ALSO assume n0

38
-ISOCLINE
39
-ISOCLINE
  • HENCE
  • The two isoclines lie on top of each other
  • NOW, there is long run growth even if n0!!!

40
betatheta1 CASE WITHOUT POPULATION GROWTH
0
41
Michael Kremer's model
42
Michael Kremer's model
  • "Population Growth and Technological Change One
    Million B.C. to 1990", Q.J.E. 1993
  • Michael Kremer's intuition was that in a
    Malthusian world, i.e. a world in which
    population is just big enough to survive, there
    is a link between the state and technology and
    the amount of population If everyone consumes
    just a "subsistence" amount, societies with more
    advanced technology (say, better agriculture)
    will be able to support larger populations
  • Hence, we could infer from the level of

43
The framework
  • Assume the following production function
  • where
  • indicates the level of technological
    progress
  • is population
  • is land
  • At least for a pre-industrial society, it may
    make sense to have only labour and land as
    production inputs. Note that the production
    function has constant returns to scale the
    replication argument is valid! (ie, double the
    amounts of input, and you double output)

44
Malthusian case
  • Now express the production function in
    per-capita terms
  • and assume that population increases when is
    above some subsistence level .
  • This will reduce output per capita, so that it
    is reasonable to assume - if population growth
    reacts fast enough - that population will
    constantly adjust such that always holds.

45
Malthusian case
  • We can solve for the population level that
    corresponds to
  • What does it mean?
  • In the absence of changes in , population will
    be constant
  • Ceteris paribus, population will be proportional
    to land area
  • If separate regions have different levels of
    technology , population or population
    density will be increasing in

46
Technological progress
  • Now enter technological progress. Assume that
    What does this imply for population
    growth?
  • Take logs and derivatives of
  • and obtain
  • population will grow at a constant rate. True?

47
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50
More than exponential growth
  • So population growth appears to be increasing in
    population. This implies faster than exponential
    growth, which is what you would achieve with
  • Why?
  • Key insight Each person has a constant
    probability of inventing a new technology. But
    because "ideas" (insights, designs. . . ) are
    nonrival, the whole society should profit from it.

51
Ideas as public goods
  • "As for the Arts of Delight and Ornament, they
    are best promoted by the greatest number of
    emulators. And it is more likely that one
    ingenious curious man may rather be found among 4
    million than among 400 persons."
  • William Petty
  • "If I could redo the history of the world,
    halving population size each year from the
    beginning of time on some random basis, I would
    not do it for fear of losing Mozart in the
    process."
  • Edmund Phelps

52
Modelling growth and ideas
  • So, because every individual has the same
    probability of inventing something new,
    should be proportional to population size
  • Insert this into
  • Result
  • population growth is itself proportional to
    population.
  • Aside Results don't change substantially if we
    assume ,
  • i.e.

53
A natural experiment
  • Could we somehow test the model?
  • Kremer suggests to consider a "natural
    experiment" the end of the last ice age around
    10'000 B.C., when previously connected land
    masses (EurasiaAfrica, the Americas, Australia,
    Tasmania) were separated and technological
    diffusion wasn't possible any more.
  • Assumptions
  • These 4 regions had shared the same basic
    technology up to that point (same ).
  • Hence, their populations must have been
    proportional to the land areas

54
4 (or 5) separated regions
55
A natural experiment
  • Prediction
  • 11500 years of separation (until 1500) should
    have lead technology levels to diverge
  • Growth rates of technology will be proportional
    to initial
  • population
  • Higher growth rates of translate into larger
    populations
  • or, given constant area of land masses, into
    higher densities

56
The natural experiment results
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