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The Solow Growth Model (Part Three)

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The augmented model that includes population growth and technological progress. Model Background As mentioned in parts I and II, the Solow growth model allows us a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Solow Growth Model (Part Three)


1
The Solow Growth Model (Part Three)
  • The augmented model that includes population
    growth and technological progress.

2
Model Background
  • As mentioned in parts I and II, the Solow growth
    model allows us a dynamic view of how savings
    affects the economy over time. We learned about
    the steady state level of capital and how a
    golden rule steady state level of capital can be
    achieved by setting the savings rate to maximize
    consumption per worker. We now augment the model
    to see the effects of population growth and
    technological progress.

3
Steady State Equilibrium
  • By expanding our model to include population
    growth our model more closely resembles the
    sustained economic growth observable in much of
    the real world.
  • To see how population growth affects the steady
    state we need to know how it affects the
    accumulation of capital per worker. When we add
    population growth (n) to our model the change in
    capital stock per worker becomes?k i (dn)k
  • As we can see population growth will have a
    negative effect on capital stock accumulation.
    We can think of (dn)k as break-even investment
    or the amount of investment necessary to keep
    capital stock per worker constant.
  • Our analysis proceeds as in the previous
    presentations. To see the impact of investment,
    depreciation, and population growth on capital we
    use the (change in capital) formula from
    above,?k i (dn)k substituting for (i)
    gives us,?k sf(k) (dn)k

4
Steady State Equilibrium with population growth
Like depreciation, population growth is one
reason why the capital stock per worker shrinks.
  • At the point where both (k) and (y) are constant
    it must be the case that,?k sf(k) (dn)k
    0 or,sf(k) (dn)kthis occurs at our
    equilibrium point k.

InvestmentBreak-even Investment
sf(k)(dn)k
k
k
At k break-even investment equals investment.
5
The impact of population growth
An increase in n
  • Suppose population growth changes from n1 to n2.
  • This shifts the line representing population
    growth and depreciation upward.

InvestmentBreak-even Investment
(dn2)k
(dn1)k
  • At the new steady state k2 capital per worker
    and output per worker are lower
  • The model predicts that economies with higher
    rates of population growth will have lower levels
    of capital per worker and lower levels of income.

sf(k)
k
k2
k1
reduces k
6
The efficiency of labour
  • We rewrite our production function
    asYF(K,LE)where E is the efficiency of
    labour. LE is a measure of the number of
    effective workers. The growth of labour
    efficiency is g.
  • Our production function yf(k) becomes output per
    effective worker sinceyY/(LE) and kK/(LE)
  • With this augmentation dk is needed to replace
    depreciating capital, nk is needed to provide
    capital to new workers, and gk is needed to
    provide capital for the new effective workers
    created by technological progress.

7
Steady State Equilibrium with population growth
and technological progress
Like depreciation and population growth, the
labour augmenting technological progress rate
causes the capital stock per worker to shrink.
  • At the point where both (k) and (y) are constant
    it must be the case that,?k sf(k) (dng)k
    0 or,sf(k) (dn)kthis occurs at our
    equilibrium point k.

Break-even investment (dng)k
InvestmentBreak-even Investment
sf(k)Investment
sf(k)(dn)k
At k break-even investment equals investment.
k
k
8
The impact of technological progress
  • Suppose the worker efficiency growth rate changes
    from g1 to g2.
  • This shifts the line representing population
    growth, depreciation, and worker efficiency
    growth upward.

An increase in g
InvestmentBreak-even Investment
(dng2)k
(dng1)k
sf(k)
  • At the new steady state k2 capital per worker
    and output per worker are lower.
  • The model predicts that economies with higher
    rates of worker efficiency growth will have lower
    levels of capital per worker and lower levels of
    income.

k
k2
k1
reduces k
9
Effects of technological progress on the golden
rule
  • With technological progress the golden rule level
    of capital is defined as the steady state that
    maximizes consumption per effective worker.
    Following our previous analysis steady state
    consumption per worker isc f(k) (d n
    g)k
  • To maximize thisMPK d n gorMPK d n
    g
  • That is, at the Golden Rule level of capital, the
    net marginal product of capital MPK d, equals
    the rate of growth of total output, ng.

10
Steady State Growth Rates in the Solow Model with
Technological Progress
Variable Symbol Steady-State Growth Rate
Capital per effective worker kK/(EL) 0
Output per effective worker yY/(EL)f(k) 0
Output per worker Y/LyE g
Total output Yy(EL) ng
11
Conclusion
  • In this section we added changes in two exogenous
    variables (population and technological growth)
    to the Solow growth model. We saw that in steady
    state output per effective worker remains
    constant, output per worker depends only on
    technological growth, and that Total output
    depends on population and technological growth.
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