Chapter 25 - Production and Growth
Chapter 25 - Production and Growth
Chapter 25 - Production and Growth
Y AK L1 where 0 1
1
Y AK L AK K
y A Ak
L L L L
y=Af(k)=Aka
k
(capital per worker)
Diminishing Returns
• The neo-classical growth theory of Solow (1956) and
Swan (1956) postulates that capital accumulations are
subject to diminishing marginal returns to capital.
• Diminishing returns implies that the amount of extra
output from each additional unit of input goes down
as the quantity of input increases.
• Saving and investment are beneficial in the short-
run, but diminishing returns to capital do not sustain
long-run growth.
• In other words, after we reach the steady state, there
is no long-run growth in Yt (unless Lt or A
increases).
Illustrating the Production Function
Output/
Worker
1 2. When the economy has a
high level of capital, an extra
unit of capital leads to a small
increase in output.
Capital/Worker
This figure shows how the amount of capital per worker influences the amount of output
per worker. Other determinants of output, including human capital, natural resources,
and technology, are held constant. The curve becomes flatter as the amount of capital
increases because of diminishing returns to capital.
Diminishing Returns
• If the variable factor of production increases, the output
will increase up to a certain point.
• After a certain point, that factor becomes less productive;
therefore, there will eventually be a decreasing marginal
return and average product decreases.
• Rich countries
– High productivity
– Additional capital investment leads to a small effect on
productivity
• Poor countries tend to grow faster than rich countries.
• Even small amounts of capital investment may increase
workers’ productivity substantially.
Catch-up effect (Convergence)
– Countries that start off poor tend to grow more rapidly than
countries that start off rich.
– Poor countries have the potential to grow at a faster rate than
rich countries because diminishing returns are not as strong
as in capital-rich countries.
– Furthermore, poorer countries can replicate the production
methods, technologies, and institutions of developed
countries.
– A second argument is that low-income countries may find it
easier to improve their technologies than high-income
countries.
– High-income countries must continually invent new
technologies, whereas low-income countries can often find
ways of applying technology that has already been invented
and is well understood.
The economist Alexander Gerschenkron (1904–1978) gave
this phenomenon a memorable name: “the advantages of
backwardness.”
Investment: s f (k)
Net investment
K0 K* Capital, K
• The steady-state level of capital K* is the level at
which investment equals depreciation, indicating that
the amount of capital will not change over time.
Output: Y
Y*
Depreciation: δ K
Y0
Investment: s Y
K0 K* Capital, K
Solving Mathematically for the Steady State
•In the steady state, investment equals depreciation and we can solve mathematically for it.
•In the steady state: Δk = sf(k)- δk=0
= sf(k) = δk
= sAkα = δk
= sA = δk/kα = δ k1-α
= k1-α = (s A)/ δ
= k*= (s A/ δ) (1/1- α)
= K/L = (s A/ δ) (1/1- α)
= K* = L (s A/ δ) (1/1- α)
•In the Solow model, diminishing returns to capital eventually force the economy to approach
a steady state in which growth depends only on exogenous technological progress.
•Solow assumes that technology is a public good and freely available to everyone at no cost
(??).
Understanding Differences in Growth Rates
• OECD countries that were relatively poor in 1960
grew quickly while countries that were relatively rich
grew slower.
• Solow’s principle of transition dynamics states that
the farther below its steady state an economy is, the
faster it will grow.
• Most poor countries have low TFP levels, low
investment rates, and high population growth which
are the three key determinants of steady-state incomes.
• Countries have more capital because they save a
greater part of their income.
Some Things to Notice
The farther the economy starts below the steady state level
of capital, the faster the economy initially grows.
Mankiw refers to this as the “catch-up” effect.
This is due to the effect of “diminishing returns”
The amount of extra output from each additional unit of
capital goes down as the capital stock gets larger.
If a country is able to increase its productivity, capital will
“catch up” quite quickly
Growth slows over time until the capital stock reaches the
steady state level.
The Solow model shows that the saving rate is a key
determinant of the steady-state capital stock.
However, the rate of saving raises growth only until the
economy reaches the new steady state.
Investment in South Korea and the Philippines,
1950-2000
Investment rate (percent) South Korea
U.S.
Philippines
Year
Brazil, S. Korea, Philippines
15000
Real GDP per capita (PWT6.1, chain)
5000 010000
BRA KOR
PHL
Constant slope
represents constant
marginal product of
capital
Gross investment line
Depreciation line
y y=kL1-a
output per worker
Slope = marginal
product = L1-a =
constant (if labour
force constant)
sy
dk
• Argument
– Natural resources - will eventually limit
how much the world’s economies can
grow
• Fixed supply of nonrenewable natural
resources – will run out.
• Stop economic growth
• Force living standards to fall
Are natural resources a limit to growth?
• Technological progress
– Often yields ways to avoid these limits
• Improved use of natural resources over
time
• Recycling
• New materials
• Are these efforts enough to permit continued
economic growth?
Are natural resources a limit to growth?
• Prices of natural resources
– Scarcity - reflected in market prices
– Natural resource prices
• Substantial short-run fluctuations
• Stable or falling - over long spans
of time
– It depends on our ability to conserve
these resources.
Saving and Investment
• Raise future productivity
– Invest more current resources in the
production of capital.
– Trade-off
• Devote fewer resources to produce
goods and services for current
consumption.
• Higher savings rate
– Fewer resources – used to make
consumption goods
– More resources – to make capital goods
– Capital stock increases
– Rising productivity
– More rapid growth in GDP
Investment from Abroad
• Investment from abroad
– Another way for a country to invest in new
capital
– Foreign direct investment
• Capital investment that is owned and
operated by a foreign entity.
– Foreign portfolio investment
• Investment financed with foreign money
but operated by domestic residents.
Investment from Abroad
• Benefits from investment
– Some flow back to the foreign capital
owners.
– Increase the economy’s stock of capital
– Higher productivity
– Higher wages
– State-of-the-art technologies
Investment from Abroad
• World Bank
– Encourages flow of capital to poor countries
– Funds from world’s advanced countries
– Makes loans to less developed countries
• Roads, sewer systems, schools, other
types of capital
– Advice about how the funds might best be
used
Investment from Abroad
• World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund
– Set up after World War II
– Economic distress leads to:
• Political turmoil, international tensions,
and military conflict
– Every country has an interest in promoting
economic prosperity around the world.
Education
• Education
– Investment in human capital
– Gap between wages of educated and
uneducated workers
– Opportunity cost: wages forgone
– Conveys positive externalities
– Public education - large subsidies to human-
capital investment
• Problem for poor countries: Brain drain
Health and Nutrition
• Human capital
– Education
– Expenditures that lead to a healthier population
• Healthier workers
– More productive
• Wages
– Reflect a worker’s productivity
Health and Nutrition
• Right investments in the health of the population
– Increase productivity
– Raise living standards
• Historical trends: long-run economic growth
– Improved health – from better nutrition
– Taller workers – higher wages – better productivity
Health and Nutrition
• Vicious circle in poor countries
– Poor countries are poor
• Because their populations are not healthy
– Populations are not healthy
• Because they are poor and cannot afford better
healthcare and nutrition
Health and Nutrition
• Virtuous circle
– Policies that lead to more rapid economic growth
– Would naturally improve health outcomes
– Which in turn would further promote economic
growth
Property Rights & Political Stability
• To foster economic growth
– Protect property rights
• Ability of people to exercise authority over the
resources they own.
• Courts – enforce property rights
– Promote political stability
• Property rights
– Prerequisite for the price system to work
Property Rights & Political Stability
• Lack of property rights
– Major problem
– Contracts are hard to enforce
– Fraud goes unpunished
– Corruption
• Impedes the coordinating power of markets
• Discourages domestic saving
• Discourages investment from abroad
Property Rights & Political Stability
• Political instability
– A threat to property rights
– Revolutions and coups
– Revolutionary government might confiscate the
capital of some businesses.
– Domestic residents - less incentive to save, invest,
and start new businesses.
– Foreigners - less incentive to invest
Free Trade
Inward-oriented policies
The infant industry argument was initiated by Alexander
Hamilton in 1791 when he argued for the protection of
industries in the United States from imports from Great
Britain.
Later on, Friedrich List published his book, National System
of Political Economy, in 1841, which helped refine,
formulate, and provide a comprehensive overview of the
infant industry argument.
Infant industries lack the capabilities to leverage their
existing production and require protection until they can
acquire similar economies of scale.
How is an infant industry protected?
Tariffs, production subsidies, quotas on imported goods
Free Trade
• Outward-oriented policies
– Integrate into the world economy
– International trade in goods and services
– Economic growth
• Amount of trade – determined by
– Government policy
– Geography
• Easier to trade for countries with natural
seaports
Research and Development
• Knowledge – public good
– Government–encourages research and
development
• Farming methods
• Aerospace research (Air Force; NASA)
• Research grants
– National Science Foundation
– National Institutes of Health
• Tax breaks
• Patent system
Population Growth
• Large population
– More workers to produce goods and services
• Larger total output of goods and services
– More consumers
• Stretching natural resources
– Malthus: an ever-increasing population
• Strain society’s ability to provide for itself
• Mankind - doomed to forever live in poverty
• Thomas Malthus came to prominence for his 1798 essay on
population growth.
• In it, he argued that population multiplies geometrically and
food arithmetically; therefore, whenever the food supply
increases, population will rapidly grow to eliminate the
abundance.
Population Growth
• Diluting the capital stock
– High population growth
• Spread the capital stock more thinly
• Lower productivity per worker
• Lower GDP per worker
• Reducing the rate of population growth
– Government regulation
– Increased awareness of birth control
– Equal opportunities for women
Population Growth
• Promoting technological progress
– World population growth
• Engine for technological progress and economic
prosperity
– More people = More scientists, more
inventors, more engineers
Summary
• International differences in income per person can be
attributed to either:
differences in the factors of production, such as the
quantities of physical and human capital, or
Differences in the efficiency with which economies use
their factors of production.
A final hypothesis is that both factor accumulation and
production efficiency are driven by a common third
variable: quality of the nation’s institutions , including
the government’s policymaking process.
Bad policies such as high inflation, excessive budget
deficits, widespread market interference, and rampant
corruption, often go hand in hand.
Summary
• The Solow growth model has emphasized the
importance of savings or investment ratio as the
main determinant of short-run economic growth.
• The neo-classical growth theory of Solow (1956) and
Swann (1956) postulates that capital accumulations
are subject to diminishing returns.
• The long run growth in GDP per capita, will depend
on TFP growth, which reflects technological
progress.
• In the absence of exogenous technological growth,
income per capita would be static in the long run.
• Technological progress, though important in
the long-run, is regarded as exogenous to the
economic system.
• The Solow Model predicts catch-up growth
(convergence in growth rate) on the basis that
poor economies will grow faster compared to
rich ones.
• One drawback of the Solow model is that
long-run growth in per capita income is
entirely exogenous.
• The Endogenous growth theory believe that human capital
and innovation capacity are the main sources of long-term
economic growth.
• Human capital is the accumulated stock of skills and
education
• Unlike Solow model, Endogenous growth theory
endogenizes technical change.
• Technological change arises from research and development
(R&D).
• A key feature of the endogenous growth model is the
absence of diminishing marginal returns to human capital.
• The endogenous growth models suggest that convergence
would not occur at all (mainly due to the fact that there are
increasing returns to scale).
Generally, the following are growth drivers:
Growth in physical capital stock (capital
deepening)
Growth in the size of active labor force available
for production
Growth in the quality of labor (human capital)
Technological progress and innovation
Institutions-including maintaining the rule of law,
stable macroeconomic and political stability
Rising demand for goods and services-either led
by domestic demand or from external trade.
Solow's Neoclassical Model or Exogenous Growth Model
•
= Yt = At Ktα Ltβ (1)
= ln (Yt) = ln (At) + α ln (Kt) + (β) ln Lt (2)
= = + α + (β) (3)
= { }* { { }* { (4)
= ; = ; = ; =
Thus, ( )/ Y = ( )/ A + ( )/ K + ( )/ L (5)
= + + (6)
= +α + (7)