ECO 4933 Topics in Theory. Introduction to Economic Growth Fall 2015

Similar documents
Only by high growth rates sustained for long periods of time.

Economic Growth Rates

Important distinction between BUSINESS CYCLES (cyclical fluctuations) and LONG-RUN GROWTH (secular trend).

Figure 1: Real GDP in the United States

Overview of Asian Insurance Markets

Nominal, Real and PPP GDP

The EU Enlargement, and Immigration from Eastern Europe

A Long-term Forecast of Demographic Transition in Japan and Asia

University of Saskatchewan Department of Economics Economics Homework #1

Chapter 1. The Development Gap

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

Chapter 6 Economic Growth

Chapter 25 Production and Growth

Economic Growth. Chapter 11

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

Annex 5A Trends in international carbon dioxide emissions

Bringing Entrepreneurship and innovation into the theory of Value

The East Asian Miracle Main characteristics of the Asian Miracle

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

Long Run Growth Solow s Neoclassical Growth Model

Introduction to the Economic Growth course

SOCIAL SCIENCES AND MANAGEMENT EXPLAINING ECONOMIC GROWTH IN ROMANIA USING THE FRAMEWORK DEVELOPED BY ROBERT SOLOW

Corporate Jet & Helicopter Finance Asia 2013

Economic Growth, Inequality and Poverty Reduction in China

Quantitative significance of growth Inequality and poverty. Sources of growth Global imbalance Tensions and risks

Consumer Credit Worldwide at year end 2012

The Global Impact of Chinese Growth

Comparing Levels of Development

Macroeconomia 9/ed R. Dornbusch, S. Fischer, R. Startz Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION

Chapter 10. Trade Policy in Developing Countries. Slides prepared by Thomas Bishop

Technology and Economic Growth

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

Joseph E. Zveglich, Jr.

Future growth patterns of world regions a GDP scenario approach

Econ 102 Economic Growth Solutions. 2. Discuss how and why each of the following might affect US per capita GDP growth:

Foreign Taxes Paid and Foreign Source Income INTECH Global Income Managed Volatility Fund

Argentina s Economy: A death foretold again, or a surprise rescue? Claudio M. Loser Centennial- Latin America March 2014

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

East Asia - A Case Study in the Global Economy

Chapter 13. Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Analysis

THE PHILIPPINE AMERICAN LIFE AND GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY 3/F PHILAMLIFE BLDG., UN AVENUE, ERMITA, MANILA TEL. NO:

Search Engine Optimization Case Study - Focus-suites.com

Appendix SM1: Sources of Modal Data and Calculation of Modal Shares

Emerging markets (%)

Digital vs Traditional Media Consumption

41 T Korea, Rep T Netherlands T Japan E Bulgaria T Argentina T Czech Republic T Greece 50.

ISRAEL S ECONOMIC GROWTH: AN INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON 1 ELHANAN HELPMAN *

Long-term macroeconomic forecasts Key trends to 2050

The Scale and Selectivity of Foreign-Born PhD Recipients in the US. Gordon Hanson, UC San Diego and NBER (*) January 2013

I FONDI STRUTTURALI E LA POLITICA REGIONALE DELL UE. IL CASO CAMPANIA

6. Gross Domestic Product by Country

Free-response/problem

EC201 Intermediate Macroeconomics. EC201 Intermediate Macroeconomics Problem Set 1 Solution

The Future of US Economic Growth

Explaining Modern Growth

International Labor Comparisons

Pre-Test Chapter 10 ed17

Workshop 8 Growth and Entrepreneurship

MA Macroeconomics 10. Growth Accounting

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 17 MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES AND ISSUES March 17, 2016

International Monetary Policy Transmission Előd Takáts and Abraham Vela Bank for International Settlements. BIS Papers No 78. Carl Musozya.

ADB Economics Working Paper Series. Saving, Investment, and Current Account Surplus in Developing Asia

Economic Growth: Measurement. Bibliography. 1. National Income. Economic Growth: Measurement

MEASURING A NATION S INCOME

The Contribution of Human capital to European Economic Growth: An empirical exploration from a panel data

International good practices in data collection and comparison

ECONOMICS INTERACTIONS WITH OTHER DISCIPLINES Vol. I - Costs of Health Care Throughout the World - R.E. Santerre

IV. DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILE OF THE OLDER POPULATION

Accounting for Cross-Country Differences In Income Per Capita*

DOMINION GLOBALIZATION WORKSHOP

Education as a Determinant of Economic Growth

Insurance Overview. Dan Bardin Prudential Corporation Asia November 2004

EMERGING MARKET CURRENCY PAIRS CURRENCY GUIDE

Capital Accumulation and Economic Growth

Chapter 12 Unemployment and Inflation

World Consumer Income and Expenditure Patterns

China s Accession to the WTO and its Impact on the Asian Economy. C. H. Kwan Nomura Research Institute

Chapter 11. Market-Clearing Models of the Business Cycle

III. INTERNATIONAL TRADE

The Determinants of Global Factoring By Leora Klapper

FY2015 Survey on the International Operations of Japanese Firms JETRO Overseas Business Survey

Determinants of Economic Growth in a Panel of Countries

Global Exhibition on Services

Global payments trends: Challenges amid rebounding revenues

Labor Markets and Economic Growth. Robert Topel University of Chicago

Growth Theory Since Solow and the Poverty of Nations: World Bank, April 26, Daron Acemoglu

Global income inequality in the 21 st century

IT S NOT FACTOR ACCUMULATION: STYLIZED FACTS AND GROWTH MODELS

IMD World Talent Report. By the IMD World Competitiveness Center

The World in 2050 The accelerating shift of global economic power: challenges and opportunities January 2011

International Education in the Comox Valley: Current and Potential Economic Impacts

An Endogenous Growth Model Approach to the Korean Economic. Growth Factors

COMMENT: THE ELUSIVE SEARCH FOR NEGATIVE WAGE IMPACTS OF IMMIGRATION

Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Changes in the Wealth of Nations (p. 3) Early Progress on the "Problem of Economic Development" (p.

global medical insurance - silver

Wealth Management Education Series. Cultivate an Understanding of Bonds

ECONOMIC GROWTH* Chapter. Key Concepts

CHAPTER 7: AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

Measuring long-run equilibrium exchange rates using standardized products with different specifications

Today, huge differences in living standards

Transcription:

ECO 4933 Topics in Theory Introduction to Economic Growth Fall 2015

Chapter 1 Facts of Economic Growth Chapter 1 2

Why Economic Growth is Important? Why some countries are rich and others are poor? (David Landes) Age-old question: An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations Counterpoint: Malthus Who called Economics the dismal science? Chapter 1 3

In the words of Robert Lucas Jr. I do not see how one can look at figures like these without seeing the as representing possibilities. If there some a government of India could take that would lead the Indian economy to grow like Indonesia s or Egypt s? If so, what exactly? If not, what is it about the nature of India that makes it so? The consequences for human welfare involved in questions like these are simply staggering: Once one starts to think about them, it is hard to think about anything else Chapter 1 4

Modern Economic Growth analysis started in the 1950s Robert Solow: A Contribution to the Theory of Economic Growth: (1956) Trevor Swan: Economic Growth and Capital Accumulation (1956) Chapter 1 5

Early 1980s: work by Robert Lucas, Jr. and Paul Romer. Emphasis on ideas and human capital Paul Romer Endogenous Growth Theory Robert Barro: empirical analysis Chapter 1 6

The facts of economic growth: 1. Some countries are very rich, and some are very poor 2. Some economies grow rapidly and others do not grow at all 3. Most economies lie in between Chapter 1 7

Stylized Fact #1: There is enormous variation in per capita income across economies. The poorest countries have per capita incomes that are less that 5 percent of per capita income in the richest countries. Chapter 1 8

Chapter 1 9

Thing to remember: 1. PPP Exchange Rates 2. Example: Big Mac Index 3. GDP per capita: more general measure of welfare 4. GDP per worker: is more a measure of labor force productivity 5. More effort, more output. Effort = LFPR Chapter 1 10

Chapter 1 11

Second Section of the Table poor countries In 2008, two-thirds of the world population lived in countries with less than 20% of U.S. GDP per worker China has aprox. 19% of world population (2015) India has aprox. 17% of world population (2015) Since 1960 both China and India have seen substantial growth in GDP per worker Chapter 1 12

Third Section of Table: NIC (Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, and South Korea) GDP per capita of Hong Kong in 2008 was higher than many rich countries Singapore was among the richest countries in the world in 2008 (rapid growth from 1960) This leads to next stylized fact Chapter 1 13

Stylized Fact #2: Rates of economic growth vary substantially across countries. Look at 4 th column in Table Rule of 70 (Lucas, 1988) [column 5] Over moderate periods of time, small differences in growth rates can lead to enormous differences in per capita incomes. Difference in growth explain why China is #2 economy Chapter 1 14

Stylized Fact #3: Growth rates are not generally constant over time. For the world as a whole, growth rates were close to zero over most of history but have increased sharply in the twentieth century. For individual countries, growth rates also change over time. Chapter 1 15

Chapter 1 16

Between 1950 & 2008 world per capita GDP grew at 2.26% per year Between 1870 & 1950 rate was only 1.1% Before 1870 rate was only 0.2% Between 500 & 1500 growth rate was essentially ZERO (Maddison) Sustained growth rates of 2% or more are a modern phenomenon Chapter 1 17

India: 1960-80 = 2%; 1980-2008 = 3.7% China: 1960-1978 = 2.1%; since 1979 = 7.7% Singapore didn t grow until after the 1950s These leads to corollary of Fact #2 and #3 Chapter 1 18

Stylized Fact #4: A country s relative position in the world distribution of per capita incomes is not immutable. Countries can move from being poor to being rich, and vice versa. e.g. Argentina. Chapter 1 19

Stylized Fact #5: (U.S. economy) 1. The real rate of return to capital, r, shows no trend upward or downward; 2. The shares of income devoted to capital, rk/y, and labor, wl/y, show no trend; and 3. The average growth rate of output per person has been positive a relatively constant over time (Figure 1.4) Chapter 1 20

1. Real interest rate on government debt in the U.S. economy shows no trend (r) 2. wl/y = 0.7 3. rk/y = 0.3 Implication: K/Y is roughly constant in U.S. (Kaldor, 1961) Chapter 1 21

Chapter 1 22

Stylized Fact #6: Growth in output and growth in the volume of international trade are closely related. (First and second wave of globalization) Chapter 1 23

Chapter 1 24

Stylized Fact #7: Both skilled and unskilled workers tend to migrate from poor to rich countries or regions. 1. Immigration restrictions 2. High cost of migrating Chapter 1 25