2 - Economic Growth With Technology Flashcards
What are the 4 different different terms in the Solow-swan growth model
- Size of Capital stock (K)
- Level of national output (Y)
- Consumption (C)
- Depreciation of capital (D)
What does the Solow-Swan growth model show
- Explains Long-term growth in an economy
- Focuses on accumulation of capital, population growth and technological progress as key drivers for economic growth
- Model suggests an initial increase in investment and capital accumulation leads to economic growth, but overtime, diminishing returns to capital set in, resulting in a steady-state level of output per capita
- Technological progress is seen as a crucial factor in sustaining long-term economic growth
Where is steady state
Where investment is equal to depreciation
Meaning all investment is being used to repair and replace capital stock; no new capital is being created
Key assumption of the Solow-Swan growth model
- Constant returns to scale: Total output doubles if all inputs (capital and labour) double
- Capital depreciates over time
- Y= F(K,N)
What is consumption
National income - Saving
What does Solow assume in the Solow-swan model
Assumes full employment of capital and labour
Explain the graph of steady state output
- Output line suddenly increases from origin and curves off straight (diminishes)
- Investment line increases from origin but not very much then curves off straight
- Depreciation line is a straight diagonal line from the origin, that crosses over investment and finishes just above
- Where investment and Depreciation cross over is the steady state output
What happens to the graph when there is an increase rate of saving and investment
- The investment curve shifts upwards (left), leading to a higher steady state output and higher steady state capital stock
Policies that promote investment in physical and human capital leads to what which then results in higher steady state output
Leads to encouragement of innovation and technological progress, which improves efficiency of markets leading to higher steady state output
What is the golden-rule saving rate
- Savings rate that maximises consumption in the steady state while ensuring that capital stock per worker is at its optimal level
- Too low a savings rate may lead to lower future output and consumption, and too high savings rate sacrifices current consumption
Describe what happens to the graph when there is technological progress
- Output curve shifts upwards (left) as well as the investment curve shifts upwards (left) as well
- Resulting in higher steady state output and higher steady state capital stock