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Economic Growth Long-Run Economic Growth and Rising Living Standards Economic Growth Long-run economic growth Increase in real GDP per capita over time Increase in the standard of living Growth rates and the rule of 70 Business cycle Fluctuations about the long-run growth trend
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Economic Growth Long-Run Economic Growth and Rising Living Standards
Economic Growth • Long-run economic growth • Increase in real GDP per capita over time • Increase in the standard of living • Growth rates and the rule of 70 • Business cycle • Fluctuations about the long-run growth trend • Recessions alternate with expansions.
Long-Run Economic Growth • What determines the potential output? • Labor productivity or Productivity Amount of output one average worker can produce in an hour • Average hours of labor Number of hours one average worker spends at the job • Labor force participation rate (LFPR) Fraction of population that wants to work • Size of population
What Determines the Potential Output? • Breaking down the total output
What Determines the Potential Output? • Review of some linear algebra If Z = X ∙ Y, then % Δ Z ≈ % ΔX + % ΔY If Z = X / Y, then % Δ Z ≈ % ΔX - % ΔY • Applying this rule to the equation of total output
Long-Run Economic Growth • What matters for a rising standard of living is real GDP per capita (i.e. per person) Since - Total real output = Productivity x Average Hours x LFPR x Population Then - Real output per capita = Total output ÷ Population Real output per capita = Productivity x Average Hours x LFPR In terms of percentage growth rates
Long-Run Economic Growth • A tendency in most developed countries is that average hours of labor are slowly decreasing So our last simplification is to ignore changes in average hours in the equation % Δ Output per person ≈ % Δ productivity + % Δ LFPR
Growth in LFPR Recall that
Growth in LFPR • Currently, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts the employment growth rate to be 1% per year until 2010, about the same as the growth rate of population • If so, the % Δ LFPR ≈ % Δ Labor force - % Δ Population = 0 • Is there anything we can do to make the labor force grow faster than population, and thus increase the rate of economic growth? • Yes • Increase labor supply • Increase labor demand
S L Real 2 Hourly S Wage L 1 B W 2 W D 1 L 2 A D L 1 L 2 Millions L 1 of Workers The U.S. Labor Market Over A Century
How To Increase Employment • Supply side • Cut income tax • Paying 40% of one’s income as taxes (federal, state, and local) discourages work effort in the United States. • Tax cut would provide incentives to people to seek jobs • Labor supply curve shifts rightward • Changes in government transfer programs • Reduce social benefits
How To Increase Employment • Demand side • Government policies that help increase skills of the workforce or that subsidize employment • government-sponsored training programs • aid to college students • employment subsidies to firms
Growth in Productivity • Recently, virtually all growth in the average standard of living can be attributed to growth in productivity • The sources for the growth in productivity • Capital stock • Human capital • Technological development • Entrepreneurship
Growth in the Capital per Worker • One key to productivity growth is growth in nation’s capital stock • With more capital, a given number of workers can produce more output than before • Growth in capital stock will increase productivity as long as it increases amount of capital per worker
Investment and the Capital Stock • A stock variable measures a quantity at a moment in time. • Capital stock is a measure of total plant and equipment in economy at any moment • A flow variable measures a process that takes place over a period of time. • Investment is a flow variable • Depreciation is decrease in the value of assets • As long as investment is greater than depreciation, total stock of capital will rise. • The greater the flow of investment, the faster will be the rise in capital stock.
Saving and Investment • Private saving • Public saving • Total saving = Private saving + Public saving • In a closed economy,
The Loanable Funds Market • Where households make their saving available to those who need additional funds • Supply of loanable funds – household saving • Demand of loanable funds – businesses and government
The Loanable Funds Market • Businesses’ demand for loanable funds is equal to their planned investment spending (Ip) • Funds obtained are borrowed, and firms pay interest on their loans • Government’s demand for loanable funds • Budget deficit (G – T) Excess of government purchases over net taxes • Government’s supply for loanable funds • Budget surplus (T – G) Excess of net taxes over government purchases
Targeting Businesses – Demand Side Reducing business taxes • Corporate profits tax • A cut in tax on profits earned by corporations • Investment tax credit • A cut in taxes for firms that invest in certain favored types of capital • Reducing business taxes or providing specific investment incentives can shift the investment curve (the demand curve in the loanable funds market) rightward
Targeting Households – Supply Side • If households decide to save more of their incomes at any given interest rate • Supply of loanable funds curve will shift rightward • What might induce households to increase their saving? • Greater uncertainty about economic future • Increase in life expectancy • Anticipation of an earlier retirement • Change in tastes toward big-ticket items • Change in attitude about saving • Any of these changes—if they occurred in many households simultaneously—would shift saving curve to the right • What can government do to increase household saving? • One often-proposed idea is to decrease capital gains tax
Government’s Budget Deficit • A increase in government purchases tends to raise interest rates. • High interest rates discourage business investments. • Crowding out effect • So, to induce businesses to invest more, government should reduce its purchases. • Shrinking deficit or rising surplus tends to reduce interest rates and increase investment. • However, the effect on economic growth depends on how the budget changes.
Human Capital and Economic Growth • Human capital • Skills and knowledge possessed by workers • An increase in human capital works like an increase in physical capital to increase output • Causes production function to shift upward • Raises productivity and increases average standard of living • Human capital investments • Education
Technology and Economic Growth • Technological development is the key to sustaining economic growth • The law of diminishing returns to capital • Solow economic model • Endogenous growth theory • Technological change is not random but determined by factors in the market system. • The principle that marginal cost equals marginal revenue in profit maximization applies in the determination of the amount of knowledge investment firms would like to make.
Technology and Economic Growth • New technology affects economy in the way that it enables any given number of workers to produce more output. • Production function shifts upward. • Government policies that encourage investment in technology • Protecting intellectual property rights • Subsidizing research and development • Subsidizing education • Entrepreneurship