Problem 1. Steady state values for two countries with different savings rates and population growth rates.



Similar documents
The Golden Rule. Where investment I is equal to the savings rate s times total production Y: So consumption per worker C/L is equal to:

Name: Date: 3. Variables that a model tries to explain are called: A. endogenous. B. exogenous. C. market clearing. D. fixed.

CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I

Economic Growth. (c) Copyright 1999 by Douglas H. Joines 1

The Solow Model. Savings and Leakages from Per Capita Capital. (n+d)k. sk^alpha. k*: steady state Per Capita Capital, k

Long Run Growth Solow s Neoclassical Growth Model

Preparation course MSc Business&Econonomics: Economic Growth

Chapters 7 and 8 Solow Growth Model Basics

Economic Growth. Chapter 11

Macroeconomics Lecture 1: The Solow Growth Model

Agenda. Long-Run Economic Growth, Part 2. The Solow Model. The Solow Model. Fundamental Determinants of Living Standards. Endogenous Growth Theory.

Economic Growth and Development EC 375. Chapter 1 #2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 (on pages 24-25) and Appendix problems A.1 and A.2 (on pages 28-29).

Chapter 7: Economic Growth part 1

MASTER IN ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT

The Real Business Cycle Model

Long Run Economic Growth Agenda. Long-run Economic Growth. Long-run Growth Model. Long-run Economic Growth. Determinants of Long-run Growth

Technology and Economic Growth

4. In the Solow model with technological progress, the steady state growth rate of total output is: A) 0. B) g. C) n. D) n + g.

Chapter 4 Technological Progress and Economic Growth

ECON20310 LECTURE SYNOPSIS REAL BUSINESS CYCLE

E-322 Muhammad Rahman. Chapter 7: Part 2. Subbing (5) into (2): H b(1. capital is denoted as: 1

Agenda. Productivity, Output, and Employment, Part 1. The Production Function. The Production Function. The Production Function. The Demand for Labor

In following this handout, sketch appropriate graphs in the space provided.

This paper is not to be removed from the Examination Halls

The Real Business Cycle model

Finance Solutions to Problem Set #3. Year Real GDP Real Capital Employment

INTRODUCTION TO ADVANCED MACROECONOMICS Preliminary Exam with answers September 2014

Economic Growth: Theory and Empirics (2012) Problem set I

13. If Y = AK 0.5 L 0.5 and A, K, and L are all 100, the marginal product of capital is: A) 50. B) 100. C) 200. D) 1,000.

Note on growth and growth accounting

GDP: The market value of final goods and services, newly produced WITHIN a nation during a fixed period.

VI. Real Business Cycles Models

Economic Growth: Lecture 11, Technology Diffusion, Trade and World Growth

The Budget Deficit, Public Debt and Endogenous Growth

14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 1 Fall 2005 ***Solution***

Economic Growth: Lectures 2 and 3: The Solow Growth Model

Keywords: Overlapping Generations Model, Tax Reform, Turkey

UNIVERSITY OF OSLO DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

19 : Theory of Production

University of Saskatchewan Department of Economics Economics Homework #1

Money and Public Finance

Lecture 14 More on Real Business Cycles. Noah Williams

Universidad de Montevideo Macroeconomia II. The Ramsey-Cass-Koopmans Model

The Aggregate Production Function Revised: January 9, 2008

Noah Williams Economics 312. University of Wisconsin Spring Midterm Examination Solutions

Calibration of Normalised CES Production Functions in Dynamic Models

Lecture 3: Growth with Overlapping Generations (Acemoglu 2009, Chapter 9, adapted from Zilibotti)

ECO 352 Spring 2010 No. 7 Feb. 23 SECTOR-SPECIFIC CAPITAL (RICARDO-VINER) MODEL

I d ( r; MPK f, τ) Y < C d +I d +G

1 National Income and Product Accounts

The RBC methodology also comes down to two principles:

Costs. Accounting Cost{stresses \out of pocket" expenses. Depreciation costs are based on tax laws.

Answers to Text Questions and Problems in Chapter 11

MA Macroeconomics 10. Growth Accounting

Practice Problems on the Capital Market

Capital Accumulation and Economic Growth

THE CONTRIBUTION OF ECONOMIC FREEDOM TO WORLD ECONOMIC GROWTH,

Economic Growth: Lectures 6 and 7, Neoclassical Growth

Choice under Uncertainty

Intermediate Macroeconomics: The Real Business Cycle Model

Markups and Firm-Level Export Status: Appendix

Case, Fair and Oster Macroeconomics Chapter 11 Problems Money Demand and the Equilibrium Interest Rate

14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 1 *Solution* Fall 2004

Is Piketty s Second Law of Capitalism Fundamental?

REVIEW OF MICROECONOMICS

Preparation course MSc Business & Econonomics- Macroeconomics: Introduction & Concepts

Introduction to Macroeconomics TOPIC 2: The Goods Market

Relative prices and Balassa Samuleson e ect

4 Macroeconomics LESSON 6

Chemical Kinetics. 2. Using the kinetics of a given reaction a possible reaction mechanism

3. a. If all money is held as currency, then the money supply is equal to the monetary base. The money supply will be $1,000.

The Global Impact of Chinese Growth

Chapter 13 Real Business Cycle Theory

Chapter 4 Consumption, Saving, and Investment

A Review of the Literature of Real Business Cycle theory. By Student E XXXXXXX

Sample Midterm Solutions

The Real Business Cycle School

Problem Set #5-Key. Economics 305-Intermediate Microeconomic Theory

Anation s ability to provide improving standards of living for its people

II- Review of the Literature

UC Berkeley Haas School of Business Economic Analysis for Business Decisions (EWMBA 201A)

Problem Set #3 Answer Key

Economics 2020a / HBS 4010 / HKS API-111 FALL 2010 Solutions to Practice Problems for Lectures 1 to 4

ECO364 - International Trade

Econ 303: Intermediate Macroeconomics I Dr. Sauer Sample Questions for Exam #3

Envelope Theorem. Kevin Wainwright. Mar 22, 2004

The Theory of Investment

Constrained optimization.

Commentary: What Do Budget Deficits Do?

Name. Final Exam, Economics 210A, December 2011 Here are some remarks to help you with answering the questions.

Hello, my name is Olga Michasova and I present the work The generalized model of economic growth with human capital accumulation.

Transcription:

Mankiw, Chapter 8. Economic Growth II: Technology, Empirics and Policy Problem 1. Steady state values for two countries with different savings rates and population growth rates. To make the problem more general, begin with a common exponent on the production function = alpha or α Production function: y = k α so that the capital/output ratio: k/y = k / k α = k 1-α where y = Y / LE and k = K/LE We will refer to the equations derived below in other problems, so be sure you understand them. Apply the percentage change rule to the definition of k to get:. % Δ k = % Δ K - % Δ L - % Δ E or since % Δ L = n and % Δ E = g by definition: Eq. 1 A % Δ k = % Δ K - n - g Next, note that Δ K = s Y - δ K or dividing through by K: Δ K / K = s Y / K - δ Since Δ K / K = % Δ K, we can rewrite Eq 1 A as: % Δ k = sy/k - δ - n - g and as Y/K = Y/LE / K/LE = y/k we have: Eq. 1 B % Δ k = s y/k - δ - n - g The definition of the steady state in the extended Solow model is that the capital stock per efficiency unit of labor does not change, or that % Δ k = 0. Hence: s y/k - δ - n - g = 0 or in the steady state the capital/output ratio will be: Capital/output ratio: k/y = s / (δ + n + g) or k 1-α = s / (δ + n + g) Solving the problem is now a matter of substitution. For the developed country, k 1-α = s / (δ + n + g) =.28 / (.01 +.02 +.04) =.28 /.07 = 4 for the underdeveloped country: k 1-α = s / (δ + n + g) =.10 / (.04+.02 +.04) =.10 /.10 = 1 If alpha = 0.25 (to make things more interesting than the text), we would find that for the developed country, k = 4 to the 1 / 1 -.25 power or 4 to the 4/3 power = 6.3496 and y = (pow 6.3496 0.25) = 1.5874. [for the text problem, with alpha = 1/2, you should find k = 16 and y = 4 in the steady state] For the underdeveloped country, k = 1 and y = 1 no matter what the value of alpha. Note that the underdeveloped country does not seem to have any problems that affect overall efficiency (since the production function is the same), so their choices seem limited to giving incentives for saving, attracting investment from abroad, and population policies. Nothing can be done about technical progress in the Solow model, where it is simply taken as exogenous, and nothing can be done about depreciation in any model.

Problem 2. US savings rate and the Golden Rule Data: Capital share of GDP = rk/y = alpha =.30 % Δ y = g =.03 (3 percent per year growth rate; in steady state, % Δ y = g) k/y = 2.5 (capital-output ratio) δ =.04 (depreciation rate) n =.01 (not given, but assumed and approximately true). a.if the US is in a steady state, as assumed by the question: COR: k/y = s / (n + g + δ ) [See problem 1, the equation labeled "Capital/output ratio"] so 2.5 = s / (.01 +.03 +.04) = s /.08 and s =.08 * 2.5 = 0.20 So in the steady state, k = ( pow 2.5 1 / 0.7 ) = 3.7024 [(pow 2.5 1/0.7) = 2.5 to the 1.4286 power. ] y = (pow 3.7024 0.3) = 1.4810 b.marginal product of capital = dy / dk = dk α / dk = αk α-1 = α y / k =.3 / 2.5 or MPK = 0. 12. Note the relation between MPK = α y / k (always) and the COR equation above (for the steady state) yields: MPK = α (n + g + δ ) / s = α / COR in the steady state.α / COR This is used in part d. c.the MPK which will maximize consumption satisfies the relation: MPK = (n + g + δ ) =.08 For the logic behind this, see p. 199-200 and p.208-9. Basically, since the steady state consumption is c* = f(k*) - (n + g + δ ) k*, we maximize consumption by taking dc* / dk* = MPK - (n + g + δ ) and setting equal to zero. Since MPK with the initial values is greater than.08, we have too little capital (note that more capital will drive the MPK down from the initial value of 0.12) d. The appropriate value of the savings rate will satisfy: MPK =.08 =.3 / COR* so that the appropriate COR* will be.3 /.08 = 3.75 e.since COR* = 3.75 = s / (n + g + δ ) from the COR equation above, we have: 3.75 = s /.08 or s =.08 * 3.75 = 0.3 will get us to Golden Rule Savings. This was a rather indirect route to find that the optimal savings rate is equal to alpha.

Problem 3. Prove the following propositions for the Solow model with population growth at rate n, and technical progress at rate g. a. The capital-output ratio is constant. Note that this means K/Y is constant, not just k/y. We showed that k/y = s / (n + g + δ ) in the last problem (equation COR) and all of s, n, g and δ were constant. But does the constancy of k/y imply the constancy of K/Y? This is not obvious, but k * LE = K and y * LE = Y, so if we take the constant k/y and multiply by LE / LE (obviously equal to the constant value of 1), we get K/Y which must also be a constant. b. Capital and labor each earn a constant share of the economy's income. Note that strictly the capital share of income is defined as rk / Y, not rk / y. The point is important in the next part of this question. Since in a competitive market the return to capital is its marginal product, we have: r = MPK = αk α-1 = αk α / k so rk = αk α rk = αy or, multiplying both sides by LE, rk = αy rk / y = α. But rk /y = rk / Y is the capital share of income; since α is constant, the capital share income is constant. If the capital share of income is constant, the labor share of income must also be constant in a model with only two factors of production. wl = (1 - α) Y follows from rk + wl = Y c. Total capital and labor income both grow at the rate n + g. Note that while rk / Y is the capital share of income, rk = αy is the total capital income. We can apply the percentage change relationship to find that % Δ rk = % Δ α + % Δ Y and, since % Δ α = 0 (α is a constant and does not change), % Δ rk = % Δ Y = n + g Also, clearly, % Δ wl = % Δ (1- α) + % Δ Y = % Δ Y = n + g, since (1- α) is constant. d. Part c might lead you to think that both r and w will also be growing at the rate n + g. This does not follow; in fact, from part (b) we note that rk = αy so r* = αy* / k* (the stars referring to steady-state variables) and in percentage change form, since alpha, y* and k* are all constant: % Δ r* = % Δα + % Δy* - % Δ k* = 0 The steady state rate of return to capital is constant. For labor, since wl = (1 - α) Y we must also have % Δ w + % Δ L = % Δ (1 - α) + % Δ Y, so % Δ w + n = n + g or % Δ w = g The growth rate of real wages does keep pace with the rate of technical progress. (Note: this does not mean that capitalism is doomed to disappear: although the rate of profit per unit of capital does not increase, the number of units of capital increases along with output, and we found above that capitalists as a whole will keep the same share of the economy's income in Solow's model).

Problem 4. Richland and Poorland and relative efficiency. In this problem, Mankiw takes the "technical progress" parameter as total factor productivity rather than as purely labor-enhancing, and writes the production function as: Y = AK α L 1 - α The production function can be rewritten, if we define E = A to the 1/1-a power, as: Y = K α (EL) 1 - α and it will be more convenient to use this form in what follows. The production function per effective unit of labor is: y = k α as usual, and we can also use the result from problem 1 that k/y = s / (n + g + d) In Richland, we have: y/k =.32 / (.01 +.02 +.05) =.32 /.08 = 4 and since y = k α, we have k/y = k to the 1-a power, and hence (using k* to mean steady-state capital per efficiency unit of labor) k* = 4 to the 1/1-a power, and finally: y* = 4 to the a / 1- a power. If a =.3, this means that a / 1-a = 3/7, and hence y* = 1.814 In Poorland, we have k/y =.10 / (.03 +.02 +.05) =.10/.10 = 1, and so: k* = 1 to the 1/1-a power and hence k* = 1 whatever the value of a. Likewise, y* = k* to the a/1-a power, and hence y* = 1 whatever the value of a. If this seems arbitrary, note that we can index all values to Richland to the values of Poorland: if I index all grades on the next exam to 50 points, and student A gets 50, his score will be 1.00 and student B who recieved 30 points will get a grade of 30/50 = 0.60. So we expect Richland to be nearly twice as rich as Poorland with a =.3 in Richland. Problem: Check the PWT 6.2 variable Y = GDP relative to the US. (stats Y) will tell you that 25 percent of the values of Y are below 7.26; or the US is more than 14 times as rich as the bottom quarter of all observations. y.ind, y.chn, y.bgd, y.hnd, y.phl, y.zar, y.cmr will show the time track for India, China, Bangladesh, Honduras, Philippines, Zaire (Congo), and Cameroon. Can the alpha for the US production function be high enough to give an answer of y* = 14 for the US? We need to solve the equation 4 to the a / 1-a power = 14. We can solve this sort of equation by taking logarithms: (a / 1-a) * ln(4) = ln (14) or a / 1-a = ln(14) / ln(4) = 2.6391 / 1.3863 = 1.9037 Since a/1-a = 1.9, we have a = 1.9-1.9a or 2.9 a = 1.9 or a = 1.9 / 2.9 = 0.6552. There is no logical objection to alpha taking on the value of 0.655, but remember that this should be the capital share of income -- and in the US, this is more like 1/3 than.6552. So unless there is something badly wrong with the basics of the Solow theory, this is not likely. We do therefore need to allow for differences in the efficiency with which each country uses available technology. The difference may be due to the quality of institutions, to policies such as trade-restricting policies, or to quality of education.

Problem 6. Endogenous Growth. [See text, pages 235-238] The key feature is a distinction between knowledge-intensive industries which do NOT face diminishing returns. Knowledge is not a "rival" good, but usable by many at the same time; and more knowledge can lead to sharply increasing returns by raising the likelihood of scientific inventions or practical innovations applying new technology. The manufacturing sector remains traditional: Y = K α (E (1 - u) L) 1 - α = K α (E W) 1 - α where (1 - u) is the share of the labor force actually working in traditional manufacturing. The "u" in this model does NOT represent "unemployment" but rather can be thought of as "university" -- the share of the work force in knowledge intensive industries. "University" is in quotation marks because industrial research labs count as well; Google and Microsoft are certainly in the knowledge intensive sector. The "product" of the "university" sector is an increase in knowledge or Δ E (either through research or teaching future workers). The production function for the "university" sector is: Δ E = g(ul) E so knowledge will grow at the rate g(ul) = Δ E / E. Note that the main input in increasing knowledge is knowledge: E produces Δ E. Of course, we also must have researchers and teachers, the "u" variable, whose productivity depends on the function g(u) -- which might be a simple numerical value as the productivity coefficient in the Ricardian model, in which case we could write Δ E = 5 * ul * E or might itself show diminishing returns, so the production function would be: Δ E = (pow ul 0.5) * E But even if so, the production function would still show no diminishing returns to knowledge itself. The important point for this problem is that a higher proportion of workers in the "university" sector means a higher multiplier for knowledge. The model looks exactly like the Solow model on the surface, once we define: k = K / [(1-u) LE] and y = Y / [(1-u) LE] The equilibrium condition will be: or: % Δ k = % Δ K - % Δ (1 - u) - % Δ L - % Δ E % Δ k = s y/k - δ - n - g (u) since % Δ K = sy - δ K and division by K gets us to the result desired. Note that % Δ (1 - u) = 0 since u will be treated as an exogenous variable here. It would of course be better to "endogenize" u, and much of the recent work in growth theory (see Jones in particular) tries to do this. We are left with k 1-α = s / (δ + n + g (u)). An increase in u will clearly directly reduces production in the manufacturing sector, and so would decrease living standards in the short run, but will mean a faster growth rate in the long run. The tradeoff is much like that involved in the simple model when the savings rate increases.

Study Guide for Mankiw, Macroeconomics, Chapters 7 and 8 Intermediate Macroeconomics -- Dr. McGahagan Spring 2008 Basic objective of these chapters: -- Master the basic Solow growth model and its extensions to population growth, productivity growth, and endogenous growth. -- Be aware of the empirical data which can be brought to bear on the model, how well the Solow model fits the data, and the revisions that have been suggested for a better fit. Model details: Cobb-Douglas production function. How does it show diminishing returns to a factor, constant returns to scale. How do you translate it into a per capita production function? How do you represent total factor productivity? labor-enhancing productivity? Equilibrium condition: percent change in k = 0. How does this apply in the basic model and in the extended models (pop. growth, productivity growth, endogenous growth)? Be able to start from this and derive the relation between the capital output ratio k/y and s, d, n, g expressed in the formula y/k = s / (n+g+d) See text problem 1 of chapter 8 for an example. Be able to show the model graphically, and explain the meaning of intersections and slopes. What are the dynamics of out-of-equilibrium growth? What happens if the capital stock begins at half the steady state value? What happens if the savings rate suddenly increases? Be able to present a time-series graph of out-of-equilibrium behavior similar to those on pages 204-5 (or from the computer program). What is the Golden Rule? How can we derive the condition MPK = d + g + n? Empirics: What does it mean to say that the Solow model predicts "balanced growth"? How does this compare to Marx's predictions of the effects of economic growth? What is convergence and why should we accept it on the basis of the Solow model? What is the actual evidence on convergence from the Penn World Tables? Does it force us to extend the model beyond capital and labor as the only factors of production? Be able to discuss the evidence presented by Mankiw-Romer-Weil and Jeffrey Sachs. Is there evidence for efficiency differences? (see chapter 8, problem 4) What is the role of human capital, international trade, institutions? Names: Identify the following: Robert Solow Daron Acemoglu Joseph Schumpeter Thomas Malthus Dani Rodrik Paul Romer Michael Kremer Andrei Shleifer Robert Lucas Jeffrey Sachs David Warsh Problems: Chapter 7: Problems 1,3,5,8 Chapter 8: Problems 1,3,4,6 Don't forget to look over the Questions for Review Endogenous Growth: What are the special characteristics of knowledge as a good? Mention "rivalry", "excludability" and "externalities" in your discussion. What is the AK model and what are its implications? Is there a "steady-state"? What is the two-sector model of endogenous growth, and what are the differences and similarities with the Solow model? What is the distinction between innovation and invention? What is "creative destruction"? Growth accounting: Don't forget the appendix to chapter 8, and the problems in the appendix.