Macroeconomics



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Ebook Macro Economi N. Gregory Mankiw(1)

Y

K



a

[(1


− u)L]

1-

a

, where is capital, is

the labor force, and is the natural rate of

unemployment. The national saving rate is s,

the labor force grows at rate n, and capital

depreciates at rate 

d

.

a. Express output per worker (y

Y/L) as a

function of capital per worker (k

K/L) and

the natural rate of unemployment. Describe

the steady state of this economy.

b. Suppose that some change in government

policy reduces the natural rate of unemploy-

ment. Describe how this change affects out-

put both immediately and over time. Is the

steady-state effect on output larger or smaller

than the immediate effect? Explain.



9.

Choose two countries that interest you—one

rich and one poor. What is the income per per-

son in each country? Find some data on country

characteristics that might help explain the differ-

ence in income: investment rates, population

growth rates, educational attainment, and so on.

(Hint: The Web site of the World Bank,

www.worldbank.org, is one place to find such

data.) How might you figure out which of these

factors is most responsible for the observed

income difference?




221

Economic Growth II: 

Technology, Empirics, and Policy

Is there some action a government of India could take that would lead the

Indian economy to grow like Indonesia’s or Egypt’s? If so, what, exactly? If

not, what is it about the “nature of India” that makes it so? The consequences

for human welfare involved in questions like these are simply staggering: Once

one starts to think about them, it is hard to think about anything else.

—Robert E. Lucas, Jr., 1988

8

C H A P T E R

T

his chapter continues our analysis of the forces governing long-run eco-



nomic growth. With the basic version of the Solow growth model as our

starting point, we take on four new tasks.

Our first task is to make the Solow model more general and realistic. In

Chapter 3 we saw that capital, labor, and technology are the key determinants of

a nation’s production of goods and services. In Chapter 7 we developed the

Solow model to show how changes in capital (through saving and investment)

and changes in the labor force (through population growth) affect the econo-

my’s output. We are now ready to add the third source of growth—changes in

technology—to the mix. The Solow model does not explain technological

progress but, instead, takes it as exogenously given and shows how it interacts

with other variables in the process of economic growth.

Our second task is to move from theory to empirics. That is, we consider how

well the Solow model fits the facts. Over the past two decades, a large literature

has examined the predictions of the Solow model and other models of eco-

nomic growth. It turns out that the glass is both half full and half empty. The

Solow model can shed much light on international growth experiences, but it is

far from the last word on the subject.

Our third task is to examine how a nation’s public policies can influence the

level and growth of its citizens’ standard of living. In particular, we address five

questions: Should our society save more or less? How can policy influence the

rate of saving? Are there some types of investment that policy should especially

encourage? What institutions ensure that the economy’s resources are put to

their best use? How can policy increase the rate of technological progress? The



Solow growth model provides the theoretical framework within which we con-

sider these policy issues.

Our fourth and final task is to consider what the Solow model leaves out. As

we have discussed previously, models help us understand the world by simplify-

ing it. After completing an analysis of a model, therefore, it is important to con-

sider whether we have oversimplified matters. In the last section, we examine a

new set of theories, called endogenous growth theories, which help to explain the

technological progress that the Solow model takes as exogenous.




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