Endogenous growth theory II. The empirics of GDP growth.

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Endogenous growth theory II. The empirics of GDP growth

Transcript of Endogenous growth theory II. The empirics of GDP growth.

Page 1: Endogenous growth theory II. The empirics of GDP growth.

Endogenous growth theory

II. The empirics of GDP growth

Page 2: Endogenous growth theory II. The empirics of GDP growth.

Questions

• What are the variables (institutional, cultural, demographic…) which determine GDP per capita and/or LT growth

• Do we expect poor countries close the gap with rich countries?

• What are the policies/institutions which allow such convergence to take place

Page 3: Endogenous growth theory II. The empirics of GDP growth.

An industry developed in the 1990s

• Take a cross-section of countries• Regress their growth performance over a given

period on a set of explanatory variables:– Investment– Education– Financial development– Corruption– Age– Political variables: coups, etc…

• Then write a World Bank report saying that variable X is “good for growth”

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The findings:

• A recent paper by Sala-i-Martin et al. runs a horse-race between a large number of specifications involving more than 67 variables

• They rank variables by robustness using Bayesian techniques

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A distribution of estimators across models:

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The most robust variables:

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The shortcomings

• Whether we are really talking about growth depends on the specification

• The economic interpretation of these regressions is not clear

• Many variables are not robust

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The initial income problem:

• If initial income is not included in the regression, we estimate a permanent sustainable growth rate

• If it is and has a negative coefficient, we estimate the long-run output level

• It can only grow if– One of the explanatory variables grow (but

most can’t)– A growth trend affects all countries

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The interpretation problem

• Some variables affect growth because they proxy for the growth in the inputs of the production function: education, investment, etc…

• Others matter because they affect human behaviour and therefore how the economy accumulates these inputs

• Finally, whether initial income should enter depends on how the input contributions are specified

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Example 1

included benot should

output initial regressor, theis / If

)()()(

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A

A

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tKtAtY

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Example 2

output initial includingby thisteapproximmacan One

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larger, ist coefficien its regressor, theis / If

)()()(

1

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AKY

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Example 3

X ofeffect out the I/K wipes Including

/

)()()(

XKI

K

I

A

A

Y

Y

tKtAtY

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Convergence in neo-classical models

• Neo-Classical models: each country converges to its own steady state

• All own steady states grow at the same rate

• But the level depend on policies, savings rates, etc

Similar countries converge to same GDP per capita

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Convergence in endogenous growth models

• A laggard never closes the gap

• Therefore, no convergence in income levels

• This because MPK is no higher for the laggard

• Furthermore, differences in policies affect the long-run growth rate

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Looking at convergence allows us to

• Test the relevance of endogenous growth models

• Assess the magnitude of the returns to accumulable factors

)1( gv

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Two approaches

• Barro and Sala-i-Martin: take a data set of similar economic units and look at convergence between them in pc GDP

• Mankiw-Romer-Weil: take a cross-country regression of growth rates on initial income controlling for own long-run steady state

Page 24: Endogenous growth theory II. The empirics of GDP growth.

Barro and Sala-i-Martin

• They use a data-base of U.S. states over a long-run period

• They estimate the equivalent of our local speed of convergence regression:

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The BSM Universal Law of Convergence:

The speed of convergence is 2 % per year

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What do we expect?

• The Solow model predicts (δ+g)(1-α)

• A reasonable calibration is δ=0.06, g=0.02, α=0.3

• This gives v=5.6 % per year

Gilles Saint-Paul
Delta adjusted for growth
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How universal is the law?

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Findings:

• The more similar the countries, the more it holds unconditionally

• The less similar the countries, the more likely we find divergence

• But the law is restored if controls are added, controlling for own steady state

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How to eradicate poverty?

• 1. Adopt the policies and institutions of advanced countries

• 2. Wait!

• How long? Suppose I am 10 times poorer than the US. How long does it take to be 2 times poorer?

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USUS

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What do we get?

• With v=0.02, ρ0 = 0.1, ρ1 = 0.5, t = 60 years!

• With v=0.056, we instead get t = 21 years

• We want to understand why the speed of convergence is so low

• Can policy increase the speed of convergence?

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Gloom?

• In principle, the speed of convergence only depends on the deep technological parameters

• That it is low tells us that the technology is not what we thought it was

• But it does not tell us we can increase v

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Mankiw-Romer and Weil

• National accounts suggest that the elasticity of capital is 0.3

• Speed of convergence is more like

1-v/(g+δ) = 1-0.02/0.08 = 0.75

• To reconcile these two facts, they introduce another form of capital: Human capital

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The Augmented Solow model

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The balanced-growth path

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Explaining cross-country differenced in pcGDP:

• The preceding equations define “own” steady state

• They use it to see if it explains cross-country income differences:

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Measuring sH

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What have we learned?

• We have seen that with α = 0.3, it is difficult to explain X-country income differences

• But now what matters is α + β, which acts as α

• So with α + β large enough we can explain cross-country differences.

• A natural question is: can we also expect slow convergence?

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Recomputing the speed of convergence

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Page 45: Endogenous growth theory II. The empirics of GDP growth.

Empirical strategy

• Investment rates and schooling are kept to proxy for own steady state

• Initial output is added

• Coefficient in initial output related to SOV as in BSM

• No other control variable is added in strict interpretation of Solow model

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Old Solow does not work…

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…but new does.

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Does it add up?

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3.0;3.0

vgn

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Summary

• The Solow model predicts too low income disparities and too quick convergence

• The AK model predicts zero convergence and widening disparities

• The Augmented Solow model does well to predict both the disparities and the speed of convergence