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Diversity, efficiency and Economic Development

Diversity, efficiency and Economic Development. Pier Paolo Saviotti, UMR GAEL, Grenoble, and CNRS GREDEG I2C, Sophia Antipolis, France. Acknowledgments. Andreas Pyka Koen Frenken Jackie Krafft. Econ Dev, Stylised facts. STF1) Economic development is characterised by qualitative change .

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Diversity, efficiency and Economic Development

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  1. Diversity, efficiency and Economic Development Pier Paolo Saviotti, UMR GAEL, Grenoble, and CNRS GREDEG I2C, Sophia Antipolis, France.

  2. Acknowledgments • Andreas Pyka • Koen Frenken • Jackie Krafft

  3. Econ Dev, Stylised facts • STF1) Economic development is characterised by qualitative change. • STF2) The efficiency of existing processes increases in the course of economic development. • STF3) The diversity/variety of the economic system rises during the process of economic development.

  4. Efficiency vs diversity • Efficiency grows when the same type of output is produced with (a) decreasing quantities of all inputs or (b) decreasing costs of all inputs • What happens if the nature of the output changes? Is a pair of shoes costing 100 € produced five times less efficiently than a pair of shoes costing 20 €?

  5. Efficiency vs diversity • In a strict sense comparisons of efficiency are only possible at constant output • The 100€ pair of shoes has higher quality • Efficiency at constant quality

  6. Qualitative and Structural Change • Qualitative change: emergence of new entities, qualitatively different (distinguishable) from the pre-existing ones. • Structural change: change in the structure of the economic system (components + linkages/interactions). Defined at the level of aggregation of industrial sectors. But: • Structural change can occur at lower levels of aggregation.

  7. Qualitative and Structural Change (2) • Structural change can occur for activities and actors as well as for outputs. • Thus also for knowledge, and institutions. • Qualitative change broader than structural change.

  8. Importance of qualitative/structural change. • They affect the composition of the economic system. They are determinantsof system performance. • Economic development is a process of transformation, involving both quantitative/efficiency change at constant composition and qualitative change.

  9. Variety • Definition: number of actors, activities and objects required to describe the economic system at a given time • Variable to represent analytically changes in composition.

  10. Diversity Stirling • Diversity overarching phenomenon with three components: • Variety: number of distinguishable entities in a system • Balance: distribution of distinguishable entities in a system • Disparity: extent of difference between any two distinguishable entities

  11. Diversity • All else being equal, the greater the variety the greater the diversity • All else being equal, the more even is the balance the greater the diversity • All else being equal, the more disparate are the represented elements the greater the diversity

  12. Modern phenomena • Most people could only purchase the bare essentials to survive until the end of the XIXth century, and many people still do today • Diversity existed only for the rich • But in the XXth century change

  13. Efficiency and Diversity • Two complementary forces/trajectories : • growing efficiency • growing diversity • Hypothesis 1: The growth in diversity is a necessary requirement for long-term economic development. • Hypothesis 2: Diversity growth, leading to new sectors, and productivity growth in pre-existing sectors, are complementary and not independent aspects of economic development.

  14. Compensation • At constant output  growing efficiency + saturating demand  possibility to produce all demanded output with declining fraction of resources (labour force)  Marxian trap • Emergence of new sectors compensates for the falling capacity of existing sectors to create employment • Growing diversity avoids Marxian trap.

  15. Economic development by the creation of new sectors • A model in which the number of new sectors varies endogenously during economic development • Sector created by an important innovation establishing an adjustment gap (size of the potential market)

  16. Model • First entrepreneur enters the market (expectation of a temporary monopoly) imitators enter  rising intensity of competition  inducement for further entry falls until exit starts dominating entry. Innovation has become part of the ‘circular flow’ (Schumpeter, 1912-1934) • Sector  oligopoly or monopoly • Adjustment gap gradually closed (saturated market) • Industry life cycle • Decline of mature sectors induces entrepreneurs to look for new opportunities of temporary monopoly, to be found by exploiting new important innovations leading to new niches and sectors.

  17. Competition • Both intra- and inter-sector: • Intra- sector:  density of product/output population. • Inter- sector: different sectors can provide comparable services. • Entrepreneur induced by expectation of temporary monopoly to enter. If innovation successful  imitation  increasing intensity of competition  decreasing inducement to enter  exit

  18. Model equation

  19. Search activities

  20. Mergers and acquisitions

  21. Demand function

  22. Demand (2)

  23. Number of firms (2) • Life cycle: in each sector Ni first increases rapidly, reaches a maximum, and then falls (oligopoly, monopoly) • But, life cycle driven purely by dynamics of competition and demand (See ILC models). • Shape of life cycle affected by several variables (AGi, Di etc).

  24. Adjustment gap

  25. Intensity of competition

  26. Employment • li = ki/Qia = ki/Qi/Ni = (ki*Ni)/Qi • li = Li/Qi

  27. Aggregate employment

  28. Aggregate employment

  29. Employment trend vs rate of growth of services

  30. Demand experiments (2) • Increasing the rate of growth of Yi (level of services supplied) • Speeds up development • raises demand, • increases AGi, • Changes the shape of the ILC • and leads to a more positive employment growth path.

  31. Compensation • The emergence of new sectors (growing variety) can compensate for the falling ability of mature sectors to create employment (Hypothesis 1) • Economic development can be sustainable in the long run. • The internal dynamics of each sector counts as well

  32. Creative destruction • Process of industrial mutation that-if I may use that biological term- incessantly revolutionizes the economic structure from within, incessantly destroying the old one, incessantly creating a new one …. • ….essential fact about capitalism….(p.83) • ….perennial gale of creative destruction…(p. 84) (Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy)

  33. Interpretations • Possible interpretations of creative destruction • For every new innovation created a previous one disappears (Aghion and Howitt), considered by AH the true Schumpeterian character of their model. • This implies: (i) Complete substitution of old by new, (ii) constant output diversity

  34. Diversity and creative destruction • They are not incompatible, but, if variety grows there must be more creation than destruction. • However, even old sectors which survive are not unaffected by the creation of the new. Old sectors/activities are transformed by new ones.

  35. Influence of competition on system performance • Two (ideal) (opposite) types of competition (extremes of a range): • Schumpeterian: do what no one else can do (radical innovation)  temporary monopoly • Classical: do the same thing as other competitors but better (i), (ii) • (i) more efficient  cheaper output • (ii) better quality

  36. Intensity of competition

  37. Overall IC vs IC + Inter-intra balance

  38. Rate of employment growth vs balance inter-intra-sector competition (Rii) for  values of kIC.

  39. Trade-offs • Inter-intra: predominance of intra-sector competition  higher probability of temporary monopoly in niches elsewhere than in established sectors. • If only Schumpeterian competition once sector created no imitation • Classical competition  production of the new good/service + efficient (cheaper)  increased economic weight

  40. Industry life cycle • In our model natural consequence of the dynamics of competition and of demandbut not exclusive of other cyclical influences • Different from other ILC models (Process R&D, Dominant designs, Refinement innovation)

  41. Demand - Search activities

  42. Demand - Search activities (2)

  43. Industry life cycle

  44. Industry Life Cycle • The shape, duration and existence of the industry life cycle is greatly affected by parameters affecting demand and search activities • In some cases the shake out virtually disappears (existence)

  45. Micro-Macro dynamics

  46. Micro-Macro dynamics (2) • The shape and duration of the ILC affects the macro-economic performance of the economic system • Model parameters affecting demand and search activities can affect • (i) the rate of creation of new sectors • (ii) the number of firms in each sector • (iii) the rate of growth of industrial concentration

  47. Micro-Macro dynamics (3) • As consequence the effects of parameters affecting demand and search activities are often non-linear • Ex: trade-off between faster rate of creation of new sectors and smaller number of firms in each sector.

  48. Efficiency vs diversity • All these (and many other) phenomena are made possible by the complementary combination of efficiency and diversity • More creation than destruction vs growing diversity • Trade-off Schumpeterian (Diversity) classical (efficiency) competition • Influence of ILC (shape etc) on macro dynamics  rate sectors + sector size

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