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ECO 3311 Ch 5: Long Run Models The Solow Growth Model

ECO 3311 Ch 5: Long Run Models The Solow Growth Model. Introduction. In this chapter, we learn: how capital accumulates over time, helping us understand economic growth. the role of the diminishing marginal product of capital in explaining differences in growth rates across countries.

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ECO 3311 Ch 5: Long Run Models The Solow Growth Model

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  1. ECO 3311 Ch 5: Long Run Models The Solow Growth Model http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  2. Introduction • In this chapter, we learn: • how capital accumulates over time, helping us understand economic growth. • the role of the diminishing marginal product of capital in explaining differences in growth rates across countries. • the principle of transition dynamics: the farther below its steady state a country is, the faster the country will grow. • the limitations of capital accumulation, and how it leaves a significant part of economic growth unexplained. http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  3. Douglass North’s “Clock” • 24-hour clock representing human experience • Starts in Africa 4-5 million years ago • “Civilization” starts 8,000 B.C. (agric. & permanent settlement) in the last 3 or 4 minutes on the clock! • Other 23 hrs, 56 mins – humans were hunters/gatherers with very slow pop. growth http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  4. World Population and Major Advances in Knowledge http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  5. Some Facts about Economic Growth • Worldwide economic growth is not constant. Average growth rates in industrialized countries were higher in the 20th than the 19th century and higher in the 19th than the 18th. • Average real incomes today in the US and western Europe are between 10 and 30 times larger than a century ago, and between 50 and 300 times larger than two centuries ago. • Productivity growth slowdown. Average annual growth in per capita output in the US and other industrialized countries since the early 1970s has been about a % point below its earlier level. • Growth miracles. Episodes where growth in a country far exceeds world averages over an extended period. E.g. Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong grew at an average annual rate of over 5% from the 1960s to the 1990s. • Growth disasters. Episodes where growth in a country is below world averages over an extended period. E.g. in 1900 Argentina’s average income was only slightly behind world’s leaders and looked poised to become a major industrialized country. But its growth performance over most of the 20th century was dismal and as a result, it is now in the middle of the world’s income distribution. Sub-Saharan African countries such as Chad, Ghana and Mozambique have been extremely poor and have been unable to attain any sustained growth in average incomes. Consequently, their average incomes have remained close to subsistence levels while average world income has been steadily rising. http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  6. it builds on the production model by adding a theory of capital accumulation developed in the mid-1950s by Robert Solow of MIT the basis for the Nobel Prize he received in 1987 TheSolow growth modelis the starting point to determine why growth differs across similar countries http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  7. The Solow growth model • capital stock is no longer exogenous • capital stock is “endogenized”: converted from an exogenous to an endogenous variable. • the accumulation of capital as a possible engine of long-run economic growth http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  8. The Solow Model (Dynamics of Growth) Addresses 3 fundamental questions: 1. What is the relationship between a nation’s saving rate, population growth, technological advancement and its L-R living standards? 2. How does economic growth evolve over time? Will it accelerate, stabilize or stop? 3. Can poorer countries catch up with the richest in terms of living standards? Robert Solow http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  9. Setting Up the Model Start with the production model from the last chapter and add an equation describing the accumulation of capital over time. Production • The production function: • is Cobb-Douglas • has constant returns to scale in capital and labor • has an exponent of one-third on capital • Variables are time subscripted as they may potentially change over time http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  10. Output can be used for either consumption (Ct) or investment (It) A resource constraint describes how an economy can use its resources Capital Accumulation capital accumulation equation: the capital stock next year equals the sum of the capital started with this year plus the amount of investment undertaken this year minus depreciation http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  11. Depreciation is the amount of capital that wears out each period the depreciation rate is viewed as approximately 10 percent Thus the change in the capital stock is investment less depreciation represents the change in the capital stock between today, period t, and next year, period t+1 http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  12. Labor the amount of labor in the economy is given exogenously at a constant level Investment the amount of investment in the economy is equal to a constant investment rate times total output remember that total output is used for either consumption or investment therefore, investment equals output times the quantity one minus the investment rate http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  13. Prices and the Real Interest Rate • If we added equations for the wage and rental price, the MPL and the MPK would pin them down, respectively -- omitting them changes nothing. • the real interest rate is the amount a person can earn by saving one unit of output for a year • or equivalently, the amount a person must pay to borrow one unit of output for a year • measured in constant dollars, not in nominal dollars http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  14. saving is the difference between income and consumption Saving equals investment: a unit of saving is a unit of investment, which becomes a unit of capital: therefore the return on saving must equal the rental price of capital the real interest rate in an economy is equal to the rental price of capital, which is equal to the marginal product of capital http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  15. Solving the Solow Model • To solve the model, write the endogenous variables as functions of the parameters of the model and graphically show what the solution looks like and solve the model in the long run. • combine the investment allocation equation with the capital accumulation equation • netinvestment is investment minus depreciation • substitute the supply of labor into the production function: (change in capital) (net investment) http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  16. We now have reduced our system of five equations and five unknowns to two equations and two unknowns: The key equations of the Solow Model are these: The production function And the capital accumulation equation How do we solve this model? We graph it, separating the two parts of the capital accumulation equation into two graph elements: saving = investment and depreciation http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  17. Investment, Depreciation At this point, dKt = sYt, so Capital, Kt The Solow Diagram graphs these two pieces together, with Kt on the x-axis: http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  18. Depreciation: d K Investment: s Y Investment, depreciation Net investment K0 K* Capital, K The Solow Diagram http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  19. Using the Solow Diagram • the amount of investment is greater than the amount of depreciation, the capital stock will increase • the capital stock will rise until investment equals depreciation: this point, the change in capital is equal to 0, and absent any shocks, the capital stock will stay at this value of capital forever • the point where investment equals depreciation is called the steady state http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  20. Investment, Depreciation K0 K1 Capital, Kt Suppose the economy starts at this K0: • We see that the red line is above the green at K0: • Saving = investment is greater than depreciation • So ∆Kt > 0 because • Then since ∆Kt >0, Kt increases from K0 to K1 > K0 http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  21. Investment, Depreciation K0 K1 Capital, Kt Now imagine if we start at a K0 here: • At K0, the green line is above the red line • Saving = investment is now less thandepreciation • So ∆Kt < 0 because • Then since ∆Kt<0,Ktdecreases from K0 to K1 < K0 http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  22. Investment, Depreciation No matter where we start, we’ll transition to K*! At this value of K, dKt = sYt, so K* Capital, Kt We call this the process of transition dynamics: Transitioning from any Kt toward the economy’s steady-state K*, where ∆Kt = 0 http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  23. when not in steady state, the economy obeys transition dynamics or in other words, the movement of capital toward a steady state notice that when depreciation is greater than investment, the economy converges to the same steady state as above at the rest point of the economy, all endogenous variables are steady transition dynamics take the economy from its initial level of capital to the steady state http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  24. Output and Consumption in the Solow Diagram • using the production function, it is evident that as K moves to its steady state by transition dynamics, output will also move to its corresponding steady state by transition dynamics • note that consumption is the difference between output and investment http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  25. Y* K* We can see what happens to output, Y, and thus to growth if we rescale the vertical axis: Investment, Depreciation, Income • Saving = investment and depreciation now appear here • Now output can be graphed in the space above in the graph • We still have transition dynamics toward K* • So we also have dynamics toward a steady-state level of income, Y* Capital, Kt http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  26. Investment, depreciation, and output Y0 Y* Investment: s Y Depreciation: d K Consumption K0 K* Capital, K The Solow Diagram with Output Output: Y http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  27. The Solow Model (Graphical Analysis) Steady-state investment kt(d) Output, Y Capital, K http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  28. The Solow Model (Graphical Analysis) Consumption, C Capital, K Level of K that maximizes C http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  29. Solving Mathematically for the Steady State • in the steady state, investment equals depreciation. If we evaluate this equation at the steady-state level of capital, we can solve mathematically for it • the steady-state level of capital is positively related with the investment rate, the size of the workforce and the productivity of the economy • the steady-state level of capital is negatively correlated with the depreciation rate http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  30. What determines the steady state? • We can solve mathematically for K* and Y* in the steady state, and doing so will help us understand the model better • In the steady state: http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  31. If we know K*, then we can find Y* using the production function: http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  32. This equation also tells us about income per capita, y, in the steady state: http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  33. notice that the exponent on the productivity parameter is greater than in the chapter 4 model: this results because a higher productivity parameter raises output as in the production model. however, higher productivity also implies the economy accumulates additional capital. the level of the capital stock itself depends on productivity http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  34. Looking at Data through the Lens of the Solow Model The Capital-Output Ratio • the capital to output ratio is given by the ratio of the investment rate to the depreciation rate: • while investment rates vary across countries, it is assumed that the depreciation rate is relatively constant http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  35. Empirically, countries with higher investment rates have higher capital to output ratios: http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  36. Differences in Y/L • the Solow model gives more weight to TFP in explaining per capita output than the production model does • Just like we did before with the simple model of production, we can use this formula to understand why some countries are so much richer • take the ratio of y* for a rich country to y* for a poor country, and assume the depreciation rate is the same across countries: 45 = 18 x 2.5 http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  37. Now we find that the factor of 45 that separates rich and poor country’s income per capita is decomposable into: A 103/2 = 18-fold difference in this productivity ratio term A (30/5)1/2 = 61/2 = 2.5-fold difference in this investment rate ratio In the Solow Model, productivity accounts for 18/20.5 = 90% of differences! 45 = 18 x 2.5 http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  38. Understanding the Steady State • the economy will settle in a steady state because the investment curve has diminishing returns • however, the rate at which production and investment rise is smaller as the capital stock is larger • a constant fraction of the capital stock depreciates every period, which implies depreciation is not diminishing as capital increases http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  39. In summary, as capital increases, diminishing returns implies that production and investment increase by less and less, but depreciation increases by the same amount . • Eventually, net investment is zero and the economy rests in steady state. • There are diminishing returns to capital: less Yt per additional Kt • That means new investment is also diminishing: less sYt = It • But depreciation is NOT diminishing; it’s a constant share of Kt http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  40. Economic Growth in the Solow Model • there is no long-run economic growth that holds forever in the Solow model • in the steady state: output, capital, output per person, and consumption per person are all constant and growth stops both constant http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  41. empirically, economies appear to continue to grow over time thus capital accumulation is not the engine of long-run economic growth saving and investment are beneficial in the short-run, but diminishing returns to capital do not sustain long-run growth in other words, after we reach the steady state, there is no long-run growth in Yt (unless Lt or A increases) http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  42. Some Economic Experiments • while the Solow model does not explain long-run economic growth, it does help to explain some differences across countries • economists can experiment with the model by changing parameter values An Increase in the Investment Rate • the investment rate increases permanently for exogenous reasons • the investment curve rotates upward, but the deprecation line remains unchanged http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  43. Investment, depreciation New investment exceeds depreciation Depreciation: d K Old investment: s Y K* K** Capital, K An Increase in the Investment Rate http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  44. the economy is now below its new steady state and the capital stock and output will increase over time by transition dynamics the long run, steady-state capital and steady-state output are higher What happens to output in response to this increase in the investment rate? the rise in investment leads capital to accumulate over time this higher capital causes output to rise as well output increases from its initial steady-state level Y* to the new steady state Y** http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  45. Investment, depreciation, and output New investment: s ‘Y Y** Y* Depreciation: d K Old investment: s Y K* K** Capital, K The Behavior of Output Following an Increase in s Output: Y (a) The Solow diagram with output. http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  46. Output, Y (ratio scale) Y** Y* 2000 2020 2040 2060 2080 2100 Time, t The Behavior of Output Following an Increase in s (cont.) (b) Output over time. http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  47. A Rise in the Depreciation Rate • the depreciation rate is exogenously shocked to a higher rate • the depreciation curve rotates upward and the investment curve remains unchanged • the new steady state is located to the left: this means that depreciation exceeds investment • the capital stock declines by transition dynamics until it reaches the new steady state • note that output declines rapidly at first but less rapidly as it converges to the new steady state http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  48. Investment, depreciation Old depreciation: d K New depreciation: d ‘K Depreciation exceeds investment Investment: s Y K** K* Capital, K A Rise in the Depreciation Rate http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  49. What happens to output in response to this increase in the depreciation rate? the decline in capital reduces output output declines rapidly at first, and then gradually settles down at its new, lower steady-state level Y** http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

  50. Investment, depreciation, and output Investment: s Y Y** Y* New depreciation: d‘K Old depreciation: dK K** K* Capital, K The Behavior of Output Following an Increase in d Output: Y (a) The Solow diagram with output. http://www.webpages.ttu.edu/vvalcarc

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