Ch 22 - Economic Growth
Friday, April 06, 2012
3:58 PM
Economic growth |
Growth over time in Potential GDP
|
Economic growth rate |
Note: In terms of living standards, real GDP per person is a better measurement
Rule of 70 |
The length of
time it takes a number to double (compounding) |
Determining potential GDP
Aggregate production function |
How much output we can get for some combination of inputs |
Output |
|
Labour |
|
Capital |
|
Total Productivity |
|
Function |
*For text, K and A is fixed to see how Y changes when L changes
Aggregate Labour Market |
Where firms demand labour, and workers supply it |
Real wage rate (Y-Axis) |
|
Labour (X-Axis) |
Amount of labour (hours/year) |
*Full employment occurs when Real wage rate = Labour
Factors that Makes Potential GDP grow:
Depends on |
Hours per
worker |
Effects |
|
Causality |
Working age
population rises
|
Labour productivity |
|
Effects |
When labour productivity rises:
|
Causality |
Increase in
labour productivity |
Need to create incentives for specialization and trade
Key components |
Firms |
Determinants |
Physical capital
growth |
Physical Capital Growth |
Accumulation of
new capital |
Human Capital Growth |
Human capital
acquired through education, training |
Technological advances |
Productivity growth is due to
Growth accounting |
Method that
separate contribution of various factors to productivity growth |
Theories
Classical Growth Theory |
Begin with minimal (subsistence) real wage rate (GDP
per hour of labour)
|
Neoclassical growth theory |
Technological change occurs.
|
New Growth Theory |
Pursuit of profit drives innovation and technological change.
Economic growth,
increases indefinitely.
Increase capital stock lowers the return to
investing in capital. Increases technological progress.
|
Policies
Achieving faster growth |
Saving - Saving finances investment. This
means that it can increase physical capital growth. (can be stimulated by
tax incentives.) |
Created by Tim Pei with Microsoft OneNote 2010
One place for all your notes and information