Chapters 7 and 8 Solow Growth Model Basics



Similar documents
Chapter 7: Economic Growth part 1

Macroeconomics Lecture 1: The Solow Growth Model

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:

CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I

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

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.

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

Long Run Growth Solow s Neoclassical Growth Model

I d ( r; MPK f, τ) Y < C d +I d +G

MASTER IN ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT

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

Preparation course MSc Business&Econonomics: Economic Growth

INTRODUCTION TO ADVANCED MACROECONOMICS Preliminary Exam with answers September 2014

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

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

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

Lecture 14 More on Real Business Cycles. Noah Williams

Deriving Demand Functions - Examples 1

Monopoly and Monopsony Labor Market Behavior

Practice Problems on the Capital Market

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

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.

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

Consumption, Saving, and Investment, Part 1

This paper is not to be removed from the Examination Halls

Chapter 4. Specific Factors and Income Distribution

Practice Problems on Current Account

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

University of Saskatchewan Department of Economics Economics Homework #1

The Specific-Factors Model: HO Model in the Short Run

Agenda. Long-Run Economic Growth, Part 1. The Sources of Economic Growth. Long-Run Economic Growth. The Sources of Economic Growth

Economic Growth. Chapter 11

13 EXPENDITURE MULTIPLIERS: THE KEYNESIAN MODEL* Chapter. Key Concepts

22 COMPETITIVE MARKETS IN THE LONG-RUN

Lecture notes for Choice Under Uncertainty

The RBC methodology also comes down to two principles:

1 National Income and Product Accounts

Prep. Course Macroeconomics

Microeconomics Instructor Miller Practice Problems Labor Market

The Real Business Cycle Model

Chapter 9. The IS-LM/AD-AS Model: A General Framework for Macroeconomic Analysis Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved

Market Supply in the Short Run

Graduate Macro Theory II: The Real Business Cycle Model

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

The Real Business Cycle model

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

MICROECONOMICS AND POLICY ANALYSIS - U8213 Professor Rajeev H. Dehejia Class Notes - Spring 2001

3 The Standard Real Business Cycle (RBC) Model. Optimal growth model + Labor decisions

Introduction to Macroeconomics TOPIC 2: The Goods Market

Macroeconomics 2. Technological progress and growth: The general Solow model. Mirko Wiederholt. Goethe University Frankfurt.

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

Chapter 4 Consumption, Saving, and Investment

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

TRADE AND INVESTMENT IN THE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS This text accompanies the material covered in class.

Revenue Structure, Objectives of a Firm and. Break-Even Analysis.

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

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

PPF's of Germany and France

Technology and Economic Growth

Intermediate Macroeconomics: The Real Business Cycle Model

Theoretical Tools of Public Economics. Part-2

Preparation course Msc Business & Econonomics

UNIVERSITY OF OSLO DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

11 PERFECT COMPETITION. Chapter. Competition

Inflation. Chapter Money Supply and Demand

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

Final. 1. (2 pts) What is the expected effect on the real demand for money of an increase in the nominal interest rate? How to explain this effect?

How To Find Out How To Balance The Two-Country Economy

Current Accounts in Open Economies Obstfeld and Rogoff, Chapter 2

Econ 102 Aggregate Supply and Demand

4 Macroeconomics LESSON 6

The fundamental question in economics is 2. Consumer Preferences

Review of Production and Cost Concepts

Production Possibilities Frontier and Output Market Efficiency. 1 Production Possibilities Frontier

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

Solution to Individual homework 2 Revised: November 22, 2011

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

Practice Multiple Choice Questions Answers are bolded. Explanations to come soon!!

International Trade Policy ECON 4633 Prof. Javier Reyes. Test #1

How To Explain The Ism

Productioin OVERVIEW. WSG5 7/7/03 4:35 PM Page 63. Copyright 2003 by Academic Press. All rights of reproduction in any form reserved.

Chapter 12: Gross Domestic Product and Growth Section 1

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

The Optimal Growth Problem

Econ 101: Principles of Microeconomics

Lecture 1: OLG Models

Chapter 13. Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Analysis

. In this case the leakage effect of tax increases is mitigated because some of the reduction in disposable income would have otherwise been saved.

Graduate Macro Theory II: Notes on Investment

CH 10 - REVIEW QUESTIONS

For a closed economy, the national income identity is written as Y = F (K; L)

Homework #6 - Answers. Uses of Macro Policy Due April 20

Choice under Uncertainty

Macroeconomics, 6e (Abel et al.) Chapter 4 Consumption, Saving, and Investment. 4.1 Consumption and Saving

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Transcription:

Chapters 7 and 8 Solow Growth Model Basics The Solow growth model breaks the growth of economies down into basics. It starts with our production function Y = F (K, L) and puts in per-worker terms. Y L = F (K L, L L ) y = f(k) (1) where k is the amount of capital per worker and y is the amount of output per worker. The slope of this function measures the change in output per worker due to a one unit increase in capital per worker which, as we saw from chapter 3, is equal to the MPK. Thus the slope of (1) is f 0 (k) =MPK. Due to the decreasing marginal productivity of capital, this is decreasing in y, making f(k) a concave function. Individuals consume whatever they do not save, where s is the savings rate, somewhere between 0 and 1 c =(1 s)y (2) All output is either allocated to consumption or investment. y = c + i (3) By combining equations 2 and 3, we can show that i = sy. 1 The Steady State What changes k? For now, we ll look at depreciation and population growth. Population increase (denoted as a percentage by n) doesnt actually affect the amount of capital (K) in our economy. Prepared by Nick Sanders, UC Davis Graduate Department of Economics 2008

What it does do, however, is decrease the amount of capital per worker (k). Depreciation (denoted by ) is the rate at which capital wears out. These two factors combined are eating away at our capital per worker on a regular basis. In order to retain an unchanging level of capital per worker k over time, we have to invest enough to create new capital to offset this loss over time. Thus, to maintain a steady state where capital per worker is constant over time, we must have that; k = {z } investment in new capital ( + n)k =0! sf(k )=( + n)k {z } loss in capital where * indicates steady state values. Note how this shows that as our capital per worker k gets larger, larger amounts of investment are required to maintain k =0. The economy will always work itself to a steady state point. If the rate of capital replenishment is greater than the loss due to depreciation and population growth ( > ( + n)k), then the capital stock will grow. If the rate of replenishment is lower than depreciation plus population growth ( < ( + n)k), then the capital stock will shrink. Only when the two are equal will there be no further adjustment to the capital stock in the economy. There are an infinite number of possible steady states, some higher than others. Which steady state our economy is in (and therefore what output we have) depends on where the sf(y) curve meets the ( + n)k curve, which in turn depends on the savings rate s in the economy. Investment, depreciation, and output per worker y * i * f(k) (δ + n)k Figure 1 shows us that the higher the savings rate, the higher the capital per worker, and the higher the output per worker. Does that mean we want to save k * Capital per worker (k) Figure 1: The steady state in a Solow growth model with depreciation and population growth. ALL our income? Of course not if none 2

of that output is consumed, people starve to death. Besides, buying things is good. So what level of savings should we aim for? 2 The Golden Rule In economics, we generally assume that the more people consume, the happier they are. So if we want people to be as happy as possible, our aim is to maximize consumption per worker c. The steady state associated with that particular outcome is called the Golden Rule (GR) steady state. By (3), we know c = f(k ) ( + n)k While higher levels of capital mean higher levels of output, they also mean more capital is being removed from the economy each year. If the capital stock is below the GR level, the slope of the production function is greater than that of the capital stock curve, and an increase in capital per worker has a greater impact on f(k) than on ( + n)k giving us an increase in consumption. The opposite will hold true when we are above the GR level. The GR steady state occurs when Investment, depreciation, and output per worker y * GR i * GR k * GR Capital per worker (k) f(k) (δ + n)k Figure 2: The Golden Rule steady state - the dotted line represents the slope of the production function at the equilibrium point and the subscript GR indicates values are Golden Rule steady state values. f 0 (k ) =( + n)k (4) {z } MPK 3

If the MPK is greater than ( + n), we know that adding capital will increase consumption. If the MPK is less than ( +n), we know that decreasing capital will increase consumption. Maximization of consumption occurs when (4) holds. A planner trying to maximize long-run consumption would then aim to get a savings rate that corresponded with that particular steady state level of capital. Note that in the transition to the GR point, there will be initial effects and long-run effects. Say were below the GR. As we increase savings, there will be a temporary decrease in consumption, and then a long run increase. Why? Because an increase in savings means less consumption right away (c = y sy). However, as capital accumulates, output increases, and thus so does consumption. This situation gives us a look into why it s called the Golden Rule... because we sacrifice consumption now for higher consumption for the people of the future. As Mankiw puts it, the welfare of all generations is given equal weight, so sacrifice by this generation is outweighed by the gains of future generations. 3 The Addition of Effective Workers With the Solow model thus far, there is no way to explain sustained growth in output per worker. To explain that, we have to add worker efficiency into the mix. Worker efficiency basically determines how productive workers can be at any given level of capital. It includes mechanical things like more efficient assembly lines and computer technology, and more human related things, like worker health and education. 1 We include worker efficiency E by allowing it to increase the productivity of labor (for this reason, it is generally called labor augmenting technology). While there may be L actual workers in the economy, the number of effective workers is L E. For example, if E =2, augmented workers produce as much output as twice as many non-augmented workers. Including worker 1 The Solow growth model doesn t make a connection between savings, investment, and technological progress. Savings affects capital stock that s all. Our growth in efficiency is exogenous, determined by some outside force over which the players in the Solow economy have no influence. 4

efficiency E into our model, we get Y L E = F ( K L E, L )=f(k) (5) L E where k is now capital per effective worker, and f(k) is now output per effective worker. The graph looks pretty much the same (see Figure 3), but there is now another force involved with the capital stock curve. The growth of worker efficiency over time is denoted g. Just as the growth in L meant a we needed more capital to maintain a constant capital-per-worker ratio, the growth in E means we need more capital to keep a constant capital-per-effective-worker ratio. This can get somewhat confusing... it looks like an increase in g moves us to a lower steady state. But higher efficiency means workers are more productive, so it seems everything should be going up, not down. Remember that we have redefined our variables to be in terms of per effective worker, so it makes sense that if our efficiency increases (i.e. the number of effective workers in our economy increases) but our capital stock doesn t change, we should have lower steady state per-effective-worker values. And, as we ll see below, while output per effective worker goes down with g, output per worker actually goes up. The steady state condition is now =( + n + g)k and the condition required for the GR point is MPK =( + n + g) Now consider what increases in efficiency do to output per worker. Output per effective worker is y = Y. A little rearranging gives us L E Y L = y E 5

(δ + n + g)k Investment, depreciation, and output per effective worker y * i * f(k) k * Capital per effective worker (k) Figure 3: The steady state in a Solow growth model with depreciation, population growth, and growth in efficiency. which shows us that output per worker (Y/L) is growing with E. As growth in worker efficiency can be maintained over time, the inclusion of this variable allows for constant long-term growth in output per worker. 6