ECO 154/254 Prof. Michael B. McElroy Multimedia by: Mannig J. Simidian Intermediate Macroeconomics.
Chapter Eight1 A PowerPoint Tutorial to Accompany macroeconomics, 5th ed. N. Gregory Mankiw Mannig...
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Transcript of Chapter Eight1 A PowerPoint Tutorial to Accompany macroeconomics, 5th ed. N. Gregory Mankiw Mannig...
Chapter Eight
1
A PowerPointTutorialto Accompany macroeconomics, 5th ed.
N. Gregory Mankiw
Mannig J. Simidian
®
CHAPTER EIGHTEconomic Growth II
Chapter Eight
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Chapter Eight
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The Production Function is now written as: Y = F (K, L E)
The term L E measures the number of effective workers. This takes into account the number of workers L and the efficiency
of each worker E. Increases in E are like increases in L.
Chapter Eight
4Capital per worker, k
k*
The Steady State
Investment, sf(k)
n + g)k
Technological progress causes E to grow at the rate g, and L grows at rate n so the number of effective workers L E is growing at rate n + g.
Now, the change in the capital stock per worker is: k = i –(n g)k, where i is equal to s f(k)
Technological progress causes E to grow at the rate g, and L grows at rate n so the number of effective workers L E is growing at rate n + g.
Now, the change in the capital stock per worker is: k = i –(n g)k, where i is equal to s f(k)
Note: k = K/LE and y=Y/(L
So, y=f(k) is now different.Also, when the g term is added,gk is needed to provided capital
to new “effective workers”created by technological progress.
Note: k = K/LE and y=Y/(L
So, y=f(k) is now different.Also, when the g term is added,gk is needed to provided capital
to new “effective workers”created by technological progress.
sf(k)
Chapter Eight
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Labor-augmenting technological progress at rate g affects the Solowgrowth model in much the same way as did population growth at raten. Now that k is defined as the amount of capital per effective worker,increases in the number of effective workers because of technologicalprogress tend to decrease k. In the steady state, investment sf(k)exactly offsets the reductions in k because of depreciation, populationgrowth, and technological progress.
Chapter Eight
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Capital per effective worker is constant in the steady state. y = f(k) output per effective worker is also constant. But the efficiency of each actual worker is growing at rate g. So, output per worker, (Y/L = y E) also grows at rate g. Total output Y = y (E L) grows at rate n + g.
Capital per effective worker is constant in the steady state. y = f(k) output per effective worker is also constant. But the efficiency of each actual worker is growing at rate g. So, output per worker, (Y/L = y E) also grows at rate g. Total output Y = y (E L) grows at rate n + g.
Chapter Eight
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Steady-state consumption is maximized if MPK = n + g,
rearranging, MPK - n + g.
That is, at the Golden Rule level of capital, the net marginal product of capital, MPK - equals the rate of growth of total output, n + g. Because actual economies experience both population growth and technological progress, we must use this criterion to evaluate whether they have more or less capital than at the Golden Rule steady state.
The introduction of technological progress also modifies the criterion for the Golden Rule. The Golden Rule level of capital is now defined as the steady state that maximizes consumption per effective worker. So, we can show that steady-state consumption per effective worker is:
c*= f (k*) - ( n + g k* c*= f (k*) - ( n + g k*
Chapter Eight
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Chapter Eight
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An important prediction of the neoclassical model is this: Among countries that have the same steady state,
the convergence hypothesis should hold: poor countries should grow faster on
average than rich countries.
Chapter Eight
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??
The Endogenous Growth Theory rejects Solow’s basic assumption of exogenous technological change.
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Start with a simple production function: Y = AK, where Y is output,K is the capital stock, and A is a constant measuring the amount ofoutput produced for each unit of capital (noticing this productionfunction does not have diminishing returns to capital). One extra unitof capital produces A extra units of output regardless of how muchcapital there is. This absence of diminishing returns to capital is the key difference between this endogenous growth model and theSolow model.
Let’s describe capital accumulation with an equation similar to thosewe’ve been using: K = sY - K. This equation states that the changein the capital stock (K) equals investment (sY) minus depreciation(K). We combine this equation with the production function, dosome rearranging, and we get: Y/Y = K/K = sA -
Chapter Eight
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Y/Y = K/K = sA -
This equation shows what determines the growth rate of output Y/Y.Notice that as long as sA > , the economy’s income grows forever,even without the assumption of exogenous technological progress.
In the Solow model, saving leads to growth temporarily, but diminishingreturns to capital eventually force the economy to approach a steadystate in which growth depends only on exogenous technological progress.
By contrast, in this endogenous growth model, saving and investment canlead to persistent growth.
Chapter Eight
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Efficiency of laborLabor-augmenting technological progressEndogenous growth theory
Efficiency of laborLabor-augmenting technological progressEndogenous growth theory