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Development Economics core course Lecture 5: Technical progress and new growth theory.

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Presentation on theme: "Development Economics core course Lecture 5: Technical progress and new growth theory."— Presentation transcript:

1 Development Economics core course Lecture 5: Technical progress and new growth theory

2 Constant returns to all accumulated inputs Decreasing returns (one or more fixed inputs cannot be accumulated) Accumulation drives growth Harrod-Domar model, capital fundamentalism: capital is the only input Human capital model: physical and human capital only inputs Technical progress required to explain continuing growth Solow model Fixed inputs are unskilled labour and maybe land. Are they important?

3 East Asia”miracle” growth 1965-90 World Bank report (1993) ”The East Asian Miracle” Found 1/3 of growth due to TFP growth: ”Productivity based catching-up” due to trade and openness Young (1995) Took better account of input growth Found good, but not unusually high, TFP growth More ”old fashioned growth”

4 Technical progress: 1. Investment in R&D 2. Spread of knowledge Current debates about patents and copyright (=”intellectuel property rights”), AIDS medicine. Is spread of knowledge and technical progress a good idea? 1.Yes, more people benefit from knowledge 2.No, it gives lower profitability and less incentives to invest in R&D 3.Yes, because leading firms need to develop new knowledge faster to keep abreast Historically, spread of knowledge has been a key factor, see Jared Diamond ”Guns, germs and steel”

5 Economic thinking on technical progress Human capital stocks may affect TFP growth Physical capital stocks may affect TFP growth Perhaps even leading to increasing returns, and accelerating growth Externalities Complementarities


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