Economic growth (III) 1. Short run or long run? (full adjustment of capital, expectations, etc....

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Economic growth (III) 1

Transcript of Economic growth (III) 1. Short run or long run? (full adjustment of capital, expectations, etc....

Page 1: Economic growth (III) 1. Short run or long run? (full adjustment of capital, expectations, etc. Classical or non-classical? (sticky wages and prices,

Economic growth (III)

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Page 2: Economic growth (III) 1. Short run or long run? (full adjustment of capital, expectations, etc. Classical or non-classical? (sticky wages and prices,

Short run or long run? (full adjustment of

capital, expectations, etc.

Classical or non-classical?(sticky wages

and prices, rationalexpectations, etc.

Classical or non-classical?(sticky wages

and prices, rationalexpectations, etc.

long-run

short-run

Neo-classicalgrowthmodel

Marxist theories?Behavior growth theories?Malthusian trap models?

yes

yes

no

no

Real business cycle (RBC);supply-side economics;

structural models;misperceptions models

Keynesian model (sloping AS, expectations-augmented

PC, IS-LM, etc.)

Schools of Macroeconomics

Page 3: Economic growth (III) 1. Short run or long run? (full adjustment of capital, expectations, etc. Classical or non-classical? (sticky wages and prices,

Agenda- A savings experiment- Theories of technological change- Real business cycles

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Review from last week• Growth involves potential output (not business cycles)• Key assumptions: fixed s, labor growth at n, labor-

augmenting tech change at h• Laws of motion:

• Long run growth of output per person, wages, productivity at rate

• But technological change is exogenous and not satisfactorily explained.

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=s ( ) ( )

Test the long-run equilibrium of 0:

s ( ) = ( )

k f k n h k

k

f k n h k

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Several “comparative dynamics” experiments

• Change growth in labor force (immigration or retirement policy)

• Change in rate of TC

• Change in national savings and investment rate (tax changes, savings changes, demographic changes)

Here we will investigate only a change in the national savings rate.

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Two faces of saving

Consumption today … or … consumption tomorrow?

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The major non-cycle economic issue of today: The federal budget

deficit and debtImportant background:

National Academy Sciences, Choosing the Nation’s Fiscal Future, 2010

National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, The Moment of Truth, 2010

The fiscal cliff at 00:00:01 am, January 1, 2013

These will be studied in coming weeks.

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Bowles-Simpson Report

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Why you can’t get anywhere without Econ 122:

Examples from the Commission

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Government debt and deficits and the economy:

What is the effect of deficit reduction on the economy?

1. In long-run (in neoclassical growth model)• Higher savings leads to higher potential output • Mechanism: higher I → K → Y, w, etc. (through

neoclassical growth model)

2. In short run (in weeks to come)• Higher savings is contractionary • Mechanism: lower S, lower AD, lower Y, inflation

Page 11: Economic growth (III) 1. Short run or long run? (full adjustment of capital, expectations, etc. Classical or non-classical? (sticky wages and prices,

Basics of the deficit and growthAssume a closed economyI = T– G + [Y – T – C(Y-T, r)] = Govt savings + private

savings = Budget surplus + Sp

At full employment and assuming that private C does not respond significantly to r, for deficits that reduce G:

ΔI = ΔS = Δ (Budget surplus)

So this is the motivation of deficit reduction for long-run growth.

Question: what is the effect?

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Page 12: Economic growth (III) 1. Short run or long run? (full adjustment of capital, expectations, etc. Classical or non-classical? (sticky wages and prices,

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k

y = f(k)

(n+δ)k

y*

(I/Y)*

k*

Impact of Higher National Saving

k**

y**

i = s2f(k)

i = s1f(k)

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Numerical Example of Deficit Reduction

Assumptions:1. Production is by Cobb-Douglas with CRTS2. Labor plus labor-augmenting TC:

1. n = 1.5 % p.a.; h = 1.5 % p.a.

3. Full employment; constant labor force participation rate.

4. Savings assumption:a. Private savings rate = 22% of GDPb. Initial govt. savings rate = minus 6 % of GDPc. In 2012, govt. changes fiscal policy to a deficit of

minus 2 % of GDP.d. All of higher govt. S goes into national S (i.e.,

constant private savings rate) and closed economy

5. “Calibrate” to U.S. economy

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Impact of Lower Govt Deficit on Major Variables

-10%

-5%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

2010 2015 2020 2025 2030

Pe

rce

nt c

ha

ng

e fr

om

ba

se

line

Consumption per capita

GDP per capita

Capital per capita

NNP per capita

- Note that takes 10 years to increase C- Political

implications- Must C

increase?- No if k>kgoldenrule

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Conclusions on Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth

• Fiscal policy affects economic growth through impact of government surplus through national savings rate

• Increases potential output through:– higher capital stock for domestic investment– higher income on foreign assets for foreign

investment• Consumption decreases at first then catches up

after a decade or so

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Classical themes in macroeconomics:Real Business Cycle Theory

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Real Business Cycles

Basic idea: cycles are caused by productivity shocks; these are propagated by changes in prices and then to labor supply.

Model Details• Start with neoclassical growth model.• Remember decomposition of output growth from growth

accounting:gY = α gK + (1-α) gL + θ, where θ = T.C.

• Changes in output come from two sources:– Technological shocks: θ random.– Changes in labor force participation: assumes very high

elasticity of labor supply with respect to wages.• This then generates random output fluctuations, which RBC

school calls business cycles.

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Real output (Q)

Price (P)

AD

AS

Q*

P*

RBC recessionAS’

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107

108

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110

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113

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12,600 12,800 13,000 13,200 13,400

Real GDP

Pri

ce le

vel

AS2008:Q1

AS2012:Q2

RBC view of current recession

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Policy implications of RBC models

• Output shocks are exogenous phenomena (earthquakes, Internet revolution, terrorist strikes, wars, etc.).

• No role for monetary or fiscal policies in cycle:– Economy and unemployment are efficient; no need for policies– Cycles are supply-driven, cannot use AD policies to stabilize

output.– Money is “neutral” (M policy cannot affect real output), so

cannot use M policy

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1. Cyclical properties of classical models of the business cycle- Hard to explain deep recessions and depressions (1930s,

2007-09) as technological regress. What did we forget?

2. Money and output: is money neutral?- RBC predicts money neutral- Much evidence that M is non-neutral

3. Labor market features (such as quits and Beveridge curve)

Verdict: Economists deeply divided.

Personal view: Keynesian approach has not developed a complete microeconomic justification, but it is most promising approach to understanding sources and policies for business cycles.

Problems in RBC models

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Promoting Technological Change

Much more difficult conceptually and for policy:- TC depends upon invention and innovation- Market failure: big gap between social MP and private

MP of inventive activity- No formula for discovery analogous to increased saving

Major instruments:- Intellectual property rights (create monopoly to reduce

MP gap): patents, copyrights- Government subsidy of research (direct to Yale; indirect

through R&D tax credit)- Rivalry but not perfect competition in markets (between

Windows and Farmer Jones)- For open economy, openness to foreign technologies

and management