economic growth

Post on 06-Jan-2016

17 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

Economic Growth. Professor Chris Adam Australian Graduate School of Management University of Sydney and University of New South Wales. INTRODUCTION. Observe rising incomes and standards of living Know that level of GDP driven by Capital Labour Technology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

1

Economic Growth

Professor Chris AdamAustralian Graduate School of ManagementUniversity of Sydney and University of New

South Wales

2

INTRODUCTION• Observe rising incomes and standards of living

• Know that level of GDP driven by– Capital

– Labour

– Technology

• Changes in GDP must come from changes in factors

3

REAL GROWTH

4

GROWTH OF COUNTRIES

5

GROWTH MODEL

• Solow-Swan growth model (1956)

– “Dynamic capital accumulation”

– Can explain how growth occurs

– Can explain differences in growth

– Key elements are savings and population

growth

– Technological progress also important but not

covered here

6

GROWTH MODEL

• Supply of goods and production

Y = F(K, L)

– Constant returns to scale

– Analyze all quantities relative to labour force:

Y/L = F(K/L, 1) or y = f(k)

7

GROWTH MODEL

• Supply of goods and production

– Slope of function is marginal productivity of

capital per worker

– Slope declines with increased capital per

worker

8

LABOUR PRODUCTIVITY

9

GROWTH MODEL

• Demand for goods and consumption

– Output per worker divided between

consumption goods and investment goods

y = c + i

– Omits government and international sectors

10

GROWTH MODEL

• Demand for goods and consumption

– Savings is fraction 0 < s < 1 of income, so

consumption is

c = (1 – s)y

– Implies investment equals saving: i = sy

11

USING GROWTH MODEL

• Capital stock growth and steady state

– Investment (i) increases capital stock = savings

(sf(k)) increases capital stock

– Depreciation reduces capital stock: depreciation

rate =

– Change in capital stock k then

k = i – k

12

USING GROWTH MODEL

• Capital stock growth and steady state

– Steady state when k = 0

– implying i = sf(k*) = k* for k* steady state

(constant) capital per worker

13

USING GROWTH MODEL

• How savings affects growth

– Increased savings rate (s) means less

consumption per worker and more investment

– Leads to higher level of capital stock per

worker (k)

– Strong empirical support

14

SAVINGS

15

USING GROWTH MODEL

• What determines savings rates?

• Similar investment rates do not always

produce same income per worker – what

else matters?

16

GOLDEN RULE OF GROWTH

• Is more savings always good?

– Gives larger capital stock per worker and higher

output per worker

– But reduces consumption per worker

• Want to compare steady states to see

which has highest consumption per worker

17

GOLDEN RULE OF GROWTH

• Consider level of consumption at steady

state

c* = f(k*) – k*

Consumption is what is left of steady state output

after allowing for steady state depreciation

• Set level of savings to ensure c* is

maximized: this is Golden Rule Savings

– occurs when marginal product of k equals

18

TRANSITION TO GOLDEN RULE

• Too much capital per worker:– Policy maker lowers saving rate to Golden Rule

level

– Increases consumption and reduces investment

– Investment rate now below depreciation rate

– Reduces output, investment further

– Consumption decreases from peak, but will remain above original level since at Golden Rule

19

TRANSITION TO GOLDEN RULE

• Too little capital per worker:– Policy maker increases saving rate to Golden

Rule level

– Reduces consumption and increases investment

– Investment rate now above depreciation rate

– Increases output, investment further

– Consumption increases from dip, and will remain above original level since at Golden Rule

20

POPULATION GROWTH

• Growth in population increases workforce– Dilutes capital and output per worker at steady

state

– Population growth rate (n) reduces capital stock per worker in same way as depreciation

k = i – (+ n)k

= sf(k) – (+ n)k

• Steady state k* from k = 0 = sf(k*) – (+ n)k*

21

POPULATION GROWTH

• Growth in population has three effects on growth:– Better view of sustained growth drivers: total

output grows

– Better view of national income differences: higher population grow lowers GDP per person

– Golden Rule adjusted: now marginal product of capital per worker to equal ( + n)

22

TAKEAWAYS

• Solow-Swan model shows– How saving sets steady state capital stock per

worker and steady state income per worker

– How population growth sets steady state capital stock per worker and steady state income per worker

– What policy makers might do to maximize consumption per worker in steady state

top related