Transcript Lecture 7

L11200 Introduction to Macroeconomics 2009/10
Lecture 7:
Long-Run Growth
Reading: Barro Ch.5
9 February 2010
Introduction
• Last time:
– Conditional convergence: model in which
economies converge to their own steady state k*,
y*
– Data provides much better support for this
• Today
– Try to explain long-run positive growth
Problem
• Model predicts economy grows to a level of
per capita GDP then stops growing
• Predicts growth rate falling over time as move
towards steady state
• Data suggests steady growth rate: why?
Change in Structural Parameters
• One possibility: changes in s, n, δ:
– Raising saving rate increases k*, y* steady state
– But also raises current growth rate.
– So continual increases in s would result in no
decline in growth rate
– Similarly continual decreases in n or δ would
cause continual increases in growth rate
– But little evidence for this
Non-diminishing marginal product
• Maybe assumption of diminishing marginal
product is wrong
– If marginal product is constant, then average
product of capital doesn’t fall as k rises
k / k  s  ( y / k )  s  n
– Instead, we have constant growth rate
– This is known as the ‘AK model’: but implausible
that marginal product doesn’t diminish!
Technological progress
• Another possibility: continual technological
progress
– Similar to effect of continual increases in saving
rate: consistent non-declining growth rate
– More plausible that continual increase in saving
rate.
– So negative effect on growth of rising k is offset by
positive effect on growth of technological progress
shifting k* to the right
Endogenous Growth Theory
• Question: where does technological growth
come from?
– Much recent growth theory has focused on the
origins of technological progress
– Endogenous growth models focus on choice
between investing in new capital versus investing
in research and development (R&D)
Endogenous Growth Theory
• Adds an extra dimension to the model
– Saving, s, can be directed towards new capital, or
directed towards raising A.
– So marginal product of capital investment vs
marginal product of R&D investment is crucial.
– Are there diminishing returns in R&D investment?
– Central issue is ownership and control of R&D
Microeconomics of R&D
• Issue of incentives for R&D is central
– If growth of A is driven by individual inventors /
entrepreneurs then structure of intellectual
property and patent law is central.
– R&D has to diffuse through economy in order to
raise general level of technology
– But investors in R&D have to be protected from
‘rivals copying their ideas.
Summary so far
• We have now answered the key growth
questions
– Why economies grow at different rates, and
exhibit different levels of GDP
– What contributes to ‘long-term growth’ and
explains steady growth rate of per capita GDP
• Next: turn to the question of fluctuations
Fluctuations
• In the growth model:
– GDP growth is steadily converging to steady state,
or growing due to technological improvements
– Labour is continually employed in production
• In reality, in the short-term
– Economy experiences negative growth rate
– Labour experiences period of unemployment
– How can we explain these fluctuations
Next Time: Fluctuations
• Begin to build a model of fluctuations
– Call this a model of the ‘business cycle’
– Based on individual actions in work/leisure,
consumption/saving
– Then consider how agents respond to changes in
technological progress
– Test whether the model can explain the pattern of
GDP growth, unemployment, inflation, interest
rates we observe in the data.