Growth 1
Growth 1
Growth 1
MACROECONOMICS
N. Gregory Mankiw
PowerPoint Slides by Ron Cronovich
CHAPT 7
2010 UPDATE
ER
Economic Growth I:
Capital Accumulation and
Population Growth
2011 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved
In this chapter, you will learn:
the closed economy Solow model
how a countrys standard of living depends on
its saving and population growth rates
how to use the Golden Rule to find the
optimal saving rate and capital stock
Why growth matters
Data on infant mortality rates:
20% in the poorest 1/5 of all countries
0.4% in the richest 1/5
In 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 poverty.
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 3
Income and poverty in the world
selected countries, 2000
links to prepared graphs @
Gapminder.org
notes: circle size is proportional to population size,
color of circle indicates continent, press play on
bottom to see the cross section graph evolve over time,
click here for one-page instruction guide
Income per capita and
Life expectancy
Infant mortality
Malaria deaths per 100,000
Adult literacy
Cell phone users per 100,000
Why growth matters
Note:
Note: this
thisproduction
productionfunction
function
exhibits
exhibitsdiminishing
diminishingMPK.
MPK.
Capital per
worker, k
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 13
The national income identity
Y=C+I (remember, no G )
In per worker terms:
y=c+i
where c = C/L and i = I /L
c1
y1 sf(k)
i1
k1 Capital per
worker, k
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 17
Depreciation
Depreciation == the
the rate
rate of
of depreciation
depreciation
per worker, k == the
the fraction
fraction of
of the
the capital
capital stock
stock
that
that wears
wears out
out each
each period
period
Capital per
worker, k
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 18
Capital accumulation
k = s f(k) k
k = s f(k) k
The Solow models central equation
Determines behavior of capital over time
which, 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
If investment is just enough to cover depreciation
[sf(k) = k ],
then capital per worker will remain constant:
k = 0.
Investment
and k
depreciation
sf(k)
k* Capital per
worker, k
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 22
Moving toward the steady
state k = sf(k)
Investment k
and k
depreciation
sf(k)
k
investment
depreciation
k1 k* Capital per
worker, k
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 23
Moving toward the steady state
k = sf(k)
Investment k
and k
depreciation
sf(k)
k1 k2 k* Capital per
worker, k
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 24
Moving toward the steady state
k = sf(k)
Investment k
and k
depreciation
sf(k)
k
investment
depreciation
k2 k* Capital per
worker, k
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 25
Moving toward the steady state
k = sf(k)
Investment k
and k
depreciation
sf(k)
k2 k3 k* Capital per
worker, k
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 27
Moving toward the steady state
k = sf(k)
Investment k
and k
depreciation
sf(k)
Summary:
Summary:
As
As long
long asas kk << kk**,,
investment
investment willwill exceed
exceed
depreciation,
depreciation,
and
and kk will
will continue
continue to to
grow
grow toward
toward kk**..
k3 k* Capital per
worker, k
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 28
NOW YOU TRY:
Approaching k* from above
Draw the Solow model diagram,
labeling the steady state k*.
On the horizontal axis, pick a value greater than k*
for the economys initial capital stock. Label it k1.
Assume:
s = 0.3
= 0.1
initial value of k = 4.0
k*
3 k*
k*
Investment
and k
depreciation s2 f(k)
s1 f(k)
k
k1* k 2*
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 35
Prediction:
*
k gold the 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*
In the steady state:
= f (k*) k* i* = k*
because k = 0.
*
y gold f (k gold
*
) *
k gold steady-state
capital per
worker, k*
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 40
The Golden Rule capital stock
f(k**)) kk**
cc** == f(k k*
is
is biggest
biggest wherewhere the the
slope
slope of of thethe f(k*)
production
production function function
equals
equals
the
the slope
slope of of the
the *
depreciation
depreciation line: line: c gold
MPK =
*
k gold steady-state
capital per
worker, k*
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 41
The transition to the
Golden Rule steady state
The economy does NOT have a tendency to
move toward the Golden Rule steady state.
Achieving the 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?
If k * k gold
*
then y
then increasing
increasing cc**
requires
requires aa fall
fall in
in s.
s.
c
In
In the
the transition
transition to
to
the
the Golden
Golden Rule,
Rule, i
consumption
consumption is is
higher
higher at at all
all points
points
in
in time.
time. t0 time
then
then increasing
increasing cc**
requires
requires an an y
increase
increase in in s.
s.
c
Future
Future generations
generations
enjoy
enjoy higher
higher
consumption,
consumption,
but
but the
the current
current i
one
one experiences
experiences
an
an initial
initial drop
drop t0 time
in
in consumption.
consumption.
k = s f(k) ( + n) k
actual
break-even
investment
investment
sf(k)
k* Capital per
worker, k
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I 48
The impact of population
growth
Investment,
break-even ( +n2) k
investment
( +n1) k
An
An increase
increase in
in nn
causes sf(k)
causes anan
increase
increase in
in break-
break-
even
even investment,
investment,
leading to a lower
steady-state level
of k.
Population growth
(percent per year, average 1960-2003)
The Golden Rule with population
growth
To find the Golden Rule capital stock,
express c* in terms of k*:
c* = y* i*
= f (k* ) ( + n) k*
In
In the
the Golden
Golden
c* is maximized when Rule
Rule steady
steady state,
state,
MPK = + n the
the marginal
marginal product
product
or equivalently, of
of capital
capital net
net of
of
MPK = n depreciation
depreciation equals
equals
the
the population
population
Economic Growth I growth
CHAPTER 7
growth rate.
rate. 52
Alternative perspectives on
population growth
The Malthusian Model (1798)
Predicts population growth will outstrip the
Earths ability to produce food, 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.