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Chapter 3. Economic Growth: Concepts and Patterns. Divergent Patterns of Economic growth. Factor Accumulation, Productivity Growth, and Economic Growth. Factor accumulation Availability Productive Use Productivity Growth Efficiency Technological change
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Chapter 3 Economic Growth: Concepts and Patterns
Factor Accumulation, Productivity Growth, and Economic Growth • Factor accumulation • Availability • Productive Use • Productivity Growth • Efficiency • Technological change Leads to major shifts in the composition of output
Saving, Investment, and Capital Accumulation • New Investment increases the capital stock • The value of new investment must be larger than the amount of depreciation of existing capital. • “Capital” can be physical capital, human capital, etc., that is, it can be machines, education, hospitals, etc.
Saving, Investment, and Capital Accumulation • Investment is financed by saving • To produce goods that will produce other goods, we have to give up consumption (i.e., save) today. • E.g., education involves staying out of the labor market for a while.
Saving, Investment, and Capital Accumulation • Saving comes from current income • Household saving • Corporate retained earnings • Government surplus
Saving, Investment, and Capital Accumulation • Investment is uncertain: Investments in education only pay off if • Complementary inputs exist • You are allowed by the government to practice • Your income is not taken by thugs • Your skills remain useful throughout your life.
Saving, Investment, and Capital Accumulation • Sustaining economic growth requires both generating new investment and ensuring the investment is productive.
Growth Accounting http://www.ggdc.net/dseries/growth-accounting.shtml
Growth Accounting • a is the measure of Total Factor Productivity… and of our ignorance • TFP plays less of a role than factor accumulation in developing countries (compared to industrial countries)
Characteristics of rapidly developing countries • Based on cross-country regressions: what are the determinants that makes countries growth differently? • We don’t know exactly how these factors contribute to growth • We don’t know which causes which.
Macroeconomic and political stability • Make investment more predictable • Protect the poor
Better health and education make workers more productive: • They make businesses more likely to invest • They makepeople more likely to save for the future
Better governance and rule of law, better bureaucracies and property rights, more effective and less burdensome regulation, less corruption: • They make businesses more likely to invest • They make people more likely to save for the future
Diminishing returns and the production function • Diminishing marginal product of capital • Productivity gains typically do not have diminishing returns
Diminishing returns and the production function • Diminishing returns means that, ceteris paribus, new investment in a poor country will have a much larger impact on output than the same investment in a rich country. • This means:
Diminishing returns and the production function • Ceteris paribus, poor countries have much larger growth potential. • Ceteris paribus, growth will slow as a country gets richer • Ceteris paribus, poor and rich countries will converge.
Diminishing returns and the production function • What is the ceteris that we are assuming to be paribus? • Same production function • Same technology • Same saving rate • If so, then growth is derived primarily from factor accumulation and not productivity growth
Structural Change • How does the composition of output change? • Engel’s Law • Share of Y produced by agriculture declines, industry and services get a bigger share. • Share of Population in agriculture declines (but not as rapidly as the share of Ag in Y), industry and services get a bigger share.
Patterns of Development, 1950-1970, with Moises. Syrquin, 1975.
Structural Change • How does the composition of output change? • Population becomes urbanized • Why? Economies of scale; common resources for industrial production. • Larger share is sold through markets rather than produced for own consumption
Structural Change • Expansion of agricultural productivity is key to reducing the share of workers in agriculture.