03 - Economic Growth Flashcards

1
Q

Economic Growth measure how much… and is a …. for poverty reduction

A

real GDP (per capita) grows over time

a powerful tool

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2
Q

What is the key to sustained economic growth?

A
  • technological progress
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3
Q

GDP per capita is ….. correlated with poverty

A

negatively

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4
Q

A steady economic growth rate…

1.
2.

A
  1. can be the key to large income per capita figures
  2. leads to exponential growth in GDP
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5
Q

Exponential Growth Definition

A
  • a process by which quantity, like GDP per capita (Y), grows at a constant porportion or growth rate (g): Yt = Y baseline x (1+g)^t
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6
Q

With exponential growth, rather small differences in growth rates lead to…

A

… large differences in quantity over time

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7
Q

What is sustained growth?

A
  • countries experiencing positive and relatively steady growth rates over 50-, 100- and even 200-year periods (e.g. UK, USA, France)
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8
Q

What is catch up growth?

A
  • some poor countries that tend to grow fast or “catch up” to rich countries, as they adopt technologies of the richer countries (Spain, South Korea, China)
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9
Q

What is the Solow Model? What are its three building blocks?

A

most commonly used economic model to analyze growth:

  • Aggregate production funtion Y = A*F (K,H)
  • physical capital accumulation equation
  • saving rate of households
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10
Q

What is a steady state equilibrium in the solow growth model?

A
  • an economic equilibrium where the physical capital stock remains constant over time
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11
Q

Analyzing the Equilibrium | What happens if K changes?

A
  • if K (physical capital stock) changes, for example due to a war, the economy will over time return to the old equilibrium (K, Y), e.g. via catch up growth
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12
Q

Analyzing the Equilibrium | What happens to H if the level of efficiency units increase?

A
  • labor H will lead to upwards shift of the savings curve and thus lead to a higher GDP Y**
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13
Q

What happens to the entire savings curve in case of technological progress?

A
  • (technological progress is increase in A) its the source of sustained growth and shifts up the entire savings curve
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14
Q

What are the proximate causes of growth?

1.
2.
3.

A
  • increasing the stock of physical capital (K)
  • increasing the total efficiency units of labor (H)
  • improving the technology (A)
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15
Q

Proximate Causes of Growth | Increasing Physical Capital

  1. How can K be increased?
  2. What does S determine?

However, even if investment in physical capital is helpful for growth, we know from the solow model that…

A
  1. to increase K one has to invest, (physical capital accumulation) i.e. save
  2. level of S is determined by individual households´decisions on how much to consume versus to save (todays vs tomorrows happiness)

…. increases in K alone are not sufficient to generate sustained growth (K exhibits diminishing returns)

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16
Q

Proximate Causes of Growth | Growing via increasing the total efficiency units of labor

What can help here? What to keep in mind?

1.
2.

A
  • population growth and investment in human capital such as education can help to increase H (H = L * h)
  • however, due to diminishing returns, increases in H alone are not sifficient to ensure sustained growh
17
Q

What are fundamental causes of growth?

GIC

1.
2.
3.

A
  • the root reasons for differences in the proximate causes
  • ultimate determinants of economic development (!)
  • geography, culture, institutions
18
Q

Fundamental Causes of Growth | What is the geography hypothesis? Name examples

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

A
  • claims that differences in geography, climate and ecology are ultimately responsible for the large differences in prosperity observed around the globe
  • impossibility of agricuöture
  • high daytime temperatures
  • lack of navigable rivers for transportation
  • high prevelance of infectious diseases like malaria
19
Q

Fundamental Causes of Growth | What is the culture hypothesis?

1.
2.
3.
4.

A
  • claims that different values and beliefs are responsible for large differences in prosperity observed around the globe
  • religious beliefs (e.g. Max Weber said that protestand beliefs lead to greater work etc)
  • family ties
  • social norms
20
Q

Fundamental Causes of Growth | What is the Institutions hypothesis? What is the definition of institutions?

1.
2.
3.

A
  • claims that differences in the way societies organize themselves via formal and informal rules are responsible for the large differences in prosperity observed around the globe
  • institutions are humanly devised constraints that shape human interaction and determine incentives
  • e.g. Adam smith and the institution market (the invisible hand) generates prosperity
21
Q

Why are inclusive economic institutions a fundamental cause of economic prosperity?

1.
2.

A
  • support and encourage economic transactions, e.g. protect private property, uphold law and order, allow and enforce private contracts, allow free entry into new lines of business and occupations
  • e.g. china developed the economy fast because of changes in economic institutions aka switching to private markets
22
Q

Lacking Economic Institutions and Entrepreneurs

1.
2.

A
  • for each level of return how many entrepreneurs are able to generate that returns (the more entrepreneurs, the less)
  • insecure property rights or the lack of legal backup for contracts can reduce returns (then equilibrium is at lower nr of entrepreneurs)
23
Q

Colonialism was driven by……

Where europeans encoutered….

1.
2.
3.

A

a profit motive

  • relatively rich economies they did not set up inclusive economic institutions but instead exploited their resources and people
  • not developed civilizations, they settled themselves (and established inclusive economic institutions)
24
Q

Does foreign aid as a pure money transfer help fighting poverty in the long run?

1.
2.
3.

A
  • amounts often not large enough to lead sizeable increases in physical capital or educational attainment and do not impact technology or the efficiency of production
  • only 10-15 per cent of aids reach destination
  • root of poverty is lacking inclusive economic institutions -> aid will not fix this
25
Q

What are the two times of economic history?

A
  • old times before 1800 where technological change was much slower and
  • GDP growth did not translate into GDP per capita growth
  • modern times
26
Q

What does the Malthusian Cycle state?

A
  • fertility would adjust so that income per capita would always remain at the subsistence level (humankind destined to live at subsistence level)
  • increase in income per capita above level -> higher fertility rates
  • higher fertility rates -> downward pressure on income per capita (bc assumed that aggregate income could not grow fatser than population)
  • thus income per capita falls below subsistence level -> famines or war will kill people, income per capita pushed up again
27
Q

What are the two developments that allowed breaking out of the malthusian cycle?

1.
2.

A
  • industrial revolution: many innovations and implementation in production process (free entry business lines, new techs etc)
  • demographic transition: decline in fertility that happens often when changing from agriculture to industry