宏观经济学英文课件:CHAP07 Economic Growth I Capital Accumulation and Population Growth

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1、MACROECONOMICS 2010 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved 2010 Worth Publishers, all rights reservedS E V E N T H E D I T I O NPowerPoint Slides by Ron CronovichN. Gregory MankiwC H A P T E REconomic Growth I:Capital Accumulation and Population Growth7Modified for EC 204 by Bob MurphyIn this chapter

2、, you will learn:the closed economy Solow model how a countrys standard of living depends on its saving and population growth rateshow to use the “Golden Rule” to find the optimal saving rate and capital stock3CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IWhy growth mattersData on infant mortality rates:20% in the poo

3、rest 1/5 of all countries0.4% in the richest 1/5In Pakistan, 85% of people live on less than $2/day.One-fourth of the poorest countries have had famines during the past 3 decades. Poverty is associated with oppression of women and minorities.Economic growth raises living standards and reduces povert

4、y.Income and poverty in the world selected countries, 2000MadagascarIndiaBangladeshNepalBotswanaMexicoChileS. KoreaBrazilRussian FederationThailandPeruChinaKenya6CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IWhy growth mattersAnything that effects the long-run rate of economic growth even by a tiny amount will have hu

5、ge effects on living standards in the long run. 1,081.4%243.7%85.4%624.5%169.2%64.0%2.5%2.0%100 years50 years25 yearspercentage increase in standard of living afterannual growth rate of income per capita7CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IWhy growth mattersIf the annual growth rate of U.S. real GDP per capi

6、ta had been just one-tenth of one percent higher during the 1990s, the U.S. would have generated an additional $496 billion of income during that decade.8CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe lessons of growth theorycan make a positive difference in the lives of hundreds of millions of people.These lessons

7、 help usunderstand why poor countries are poordesign policies that can help them growlearn how our own growth rate is affected by shocks and our governments policies9CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe Solow modeldue to Robert Solow,won Nobel Prize for contributions to the study of economic growtha major

8、 paradigm:widely used in policy makingbenchmark against which most recent growth theories are comparedlooks at the determinants of economic growth and the standard of living in the long run10CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IHow Solow model is different from Chapter 3s model1.K is no longer fixed:investmen

9、t causes it to grow, depreciation causes it to shrink2.L is no longer fixed:population growth causes it to grow3.the consumption function is simpler11CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IHow Solow model is different from Chapter 3s model4.no G or T(only to simplify presentation; we can still do fiscal policy

10、experiments)5.cosmetic differences12CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe production functionIn aggregate terms: Y = F (K, L)Define: y = Y/L = output per worker k = K/L = capital per worker Assume constant returns to scale:zY = F (zK, zL ) for any z 0Pick z = 1/L. Then Y/L = F (K/L, 1) y = F (k, 1) y = f(k

11、)where f(k) = F(k, 1) 13CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe production functionOutput per worker, y Capital per worker, k f(k)Note: this production function exhibits diminishing MPK. 1MPK = f(k +1) f(k)14CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe national income identityY = C + I (remember, no G )In “per worker” ter

12、ms: y = c + i where c = C/L and i = I /L 15CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe consumption functions = the saving rate, the fraction of income that is saved (s is an exogenous parameter)Note: s is the only lowercase variable that is not equal to its uppercase version divided by LConsumption function: c =

13、 (1s)y (per worker)16CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth ISaving and investmentsaving (per worker)= y c = y (1s)y = syNational income identity is y = c + iRearrange to get: i = y c = sy (investment = saving, like in chap. 3!) Using the results above, i = sy = sf(k)17CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IOutput, consumpt

14、ion, and investmentOutput per worker, y Capital per worker, k f(k)sf(k)k1 y1 i1 c1 18CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IDepreciationDepreciation per worker, k Capital per worker, k k = the rate of depreciation = the fraction of the capital stock that wears out each period119CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth ICapita

15、l accumulationChange in capital stock= investment depreciationk = i kSince i = sf(k) , this becomes:k = s f(k) k The basic idea: Investment increases the capital stock, depreciation reduces it. 20CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe equation of motion for kThe Solow models central equationDetermines behav

16、ior of capital over timewhich, in turn, determines behavior of all of the other endogenous variables because they all depend on k. E.g., income per person: y = f(k)consumption per person: c = (1s) f(k) k = s f(k) k 21CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe steady stateIf investment is just enough to cover de

17、preciation sf(k) = k , then capital per worker will remain constant: k = 0. This occurs at one value of k, denoted k*, called the steady state capital stock. k = s f(k) k 22CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe steady stateInvestment and depreciation Capital per worker, k sf(k)kk* 23CHAPTER 7 Economic Grow

18、th IMoving toward the steady stateInvestment and depreciation Capital per worker, k sf(k)kk* k = sf(k) kdepreciationkk1investment24CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IMoving toward the steady stateInvestment and depreciation Capital per worker, k sf(k)kk* k1k = sf(k) kkk225CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IMoving t

19、oward the steady stateInvestment and depreciation Capital per worker, k sf(k)kk* k = sf(k) kk2investmentdepreciationk27CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IMoving toward the steady stateInvestment and depreciation Capital per worker, k sf(k)kk* k = sf(k) kk2kk328CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IMoving toward the st

20、eady stateInvestment and depreciation Capital per worker, k sf(k)kk* k = sf(k) kk3Summary:As long as k k*, investment will exceed depreciation, and k will continue to grow toward k*.35CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IAn increase in the saving rateInvestment and depreciationkdks1 f(k)An increase in the sav

21、ing rate raises investmentcausing k to grow toward a new steady state: s2 f(k)36CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IPrediction:Higher s higher k*. And since y = f(k) , higher k* higher y* . Thus, the Solow model predicts that countries with higher rates of saving and investment will have higher levels of cap

22、ital and income per worker in the long run. International evidence on investment rates and income per personIncome per person in 2003 (log scale) Investment as percentage of output (average 1960-2003) 38CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe Golden Rule: IntroductionDifferent values of s lead to different s

23、teady states. How do we know which is the “best” steady state? The “best” steady state has the highest possible consumption per person: c* = (1s) f(k*).An increase in s leads to higher k* and y*, which raises c* reduces consumptions share of income (1s), which lowers c*. So, how do we find the s and

24、 k* that maximize c*?39CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe Golden Rule capital stockthe Golden Rule level of capital, the steady state value of k that maximizes consumption. To find it, first express c* in terms of k*:c* = y* i*= f (k*) i* = f (k*) k* In the steady state:i* = k* because k = 0.40CHAPTER 7

25、 Economic Growth IThen, graph f(k*) and k*, look for the point where the gap between them is biggest. The Golden Rule capital stocksteady state output and depreciationsteady-state capital per worker, k* f(k*) k*41CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe Golden Rule capital stockc* = f(k*) k*is biggest where t

26、he slope of the production function equals the slope of the depreciation line: steady-state capital per worker, k* f(k*) k*MPK = 42CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe transition to the Golden Rule steady stateThe economy does NOT have a tendency to move toward the Golden Rule steady state. Achieving the

27、Golden Rule requires that policymakers adjust s.This adjustment leads to a new steady state with higher consumption. But what happens to consumption during the transition to the Golden Rule? 43CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IStarting with too much capitalthen increasing c* requires a fall in s. In the tr

28、ansition to the Golden Rule, consumption is higher at all points in time.timet0ciy44CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IStarting with too little capitalthen increasing c* requires an increase in s. Future generations enjoy higher consumption, but the current one experiences an initial drop in consumption.tim

29、et0ciy45CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IPopulation growthAssume the population and labor force grow at rate n (exogenous):EX: Suppose L = 1,000 in year 1 and the population is growing at 2% per year (n = 0.02). Then L = n L = 0.02 1,000 = 20,so L = 1,020 in year 2.46CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IBreak-even

30、investment( + n)k = break-even investment, the amount of investment necessary to keep k constant. Break-even investment includes: k to replace capital as it wears outn k to equip new workers with capital(Otherwise, k would fall as the existing capital stock is spread more thinly over a larger popula

31、tion of workers.)47CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe equation of motion for kWith population growth, the equation of motion for k is:break-even investmentactual investmentk = s f(k) ( + n) k48CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe Solow model diagramInvestment, break-even investmentCapital per worker, k sf(k)(

32、 + n ) kk* k = s f(k) ( +n)k49CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe impact of population growthInvestment, break-even investmentCapital per worker, k sf(k)( +n1) kk1* ( +n2) kk2* An increase in n causes an increase in break-even investment,leading to a lower steady-state level of k.50CHAPTER 7 Economic Gro

33、wth IPrediction:Higher n lower k*. And since y = f(k) , lower k* lower y*. Thus, the Solow model predicts that countries with higher population growth rates will have lower levels of capital and income per worker in the long run. International evidence on population growth and income per personIncom

34、e per person in 2003 (log scale) Population growth (percent per year, average 1960-2003) 52CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IThe Golden Rule with population growthTo find the Golden Rule capital stock, express c* in terms of k*:c* = y* i*= f (k* ) ( + n) k* c* is maximized when MPK = + n or equivalently, M

35、PK = nIn the Golden Rule steady state, the marginal product of capital net of depreciation equals the population growth rate.53CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IAlternative perspectives on population growthThe Malthusian Model (1798)Predicts population growth will outstrip the Earths ability to produce foo

36、d, leading to the impoverishment of humanity.Since Malthus, world population has increased sixfold, yet living standards are higher than ever.Malthus neglected the effects of technological progress. 54CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth IAlternative perspectives on population growthThe Kremerian Model (1993)P

37、osits that population growth contributes to economic growth. More people = more geniuses, scientists & engineers, so faster technological progress.Evidence, from very long historical periods: As world pop. growth rate increased, so did rate of growth in living standardsHistorically, regions with lar

38、ger populations have enjoyed faster growth.Chapter Summary1.The Solow growth model shows that, in the long run, a countrys standard of living depends:positively on its saving ratenegatively on its population growth rate2.An increase in the saving rate leads to:higher output in the long runfaster gro

39、wth temporarily but not faster steady state growthChapter Summary3.If the economy has more capital than the Golden Rule level, then reducing saving will increase consumption at all points in time, making all generations better off. If the economy has less capital than the Golden Rule level, then increasing saving will increase consumption for future generations, but reduce consumption for the present generation.

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