ZeePedia

THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Land

<< THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):GROWTH
THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Growth-inflation >>
img
Introduction to Economics ­ECO401
VU
Lesson 11.6
THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS
(CONTINUED.......)
Link between growth and the various factors of production:
Before we move to neo-classical and endogenous growth theories, let us gain a better
understanding of the link between growth and the various factors of production. We begin by
recalling the familiar Cobb-Douglas constant returns to scale production function: Y = KαL1-α for
a hypothetical economy. Here Y denotes output, K denotes capital (machines, buildings etc.),
L denotes labour, and α is a parameter that lies between 0 and 1. Dividing both sides by L and
substituting Y/L = y (per capita output), and K/L = k (per capita capital), we have the per capita
production function y = kα.
Labor and Capital:
Now for a given L and no depreciation, an increase in K should translate into an increase in k
and through it an increase in y. This is an example of capital deepening induced growth.
However, when there is depreciation (say at a rate d% p.a.) of the capital stock and the labour
supply is growing at n% p.a., capital must grow at least by (d+n)% p.a. in order keep K/L, or k,
constant. This is called capital widening, i.e. more capital being created but spread over a
larger population so as to deliver the same K/L. The per capita output impact of capital
widening is zero, because k remains the same.
Now taking capital as fixed, let's analyze the ways in which labour can serve as the engine of
growth. It is obvious that an increase in the no. of labour hours worked would expand output.
However, historically, the working week has been shortened from 6 to 5 days so it would be
incorrect to cite this as the major source of world economic growth over the last century. What
else could therefore have driven the rapid expansion of production in the 20th century. It might
be the case that there are now more people on the labour force, due to perhaps a larger
proportion of women doing marketable jobs (which is historically accurate). Then it might be
that the quality of human capital has gone up. The same workers, because they are better
educated and have better skills, can produce more output using the same amount of capital.
Japan and Germany are prime examples of this ­ i.e. of countries which achieved very high
growth rates despite having very low levels of physical capital left after World War II. It was the
quality of these countries' human capital which made the difference.
Land:
Let's now concentrate on land. The earliest thinking on this was all doom and gloom. Malthus
(1798), for instance, noted that the supply of land, esp. agricultural land, was fixed, whereas
world population was rising fast. Given diminishing returns (in terms of marginal food product)
to labour, the implication was obvious: world hunger. While the starvation hypothesis did come
true for come countries, it did not happen for the whole world. Why? Predominantly because
of  unanticipated  productivity  improvements  in  agricultural  production.  Technological
breakthroughs, like tractors, fertilizers, etc. increased yields per acre by many 100s of
percents permitting a food output that far exceeded world food requirements even with a larger
population. Today, land does not feature centrally in growth theory, as many countries (e.g.
European countries, Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong, etc.) were seen to achieve very high
growth rates while geographically much larger South Asian, Latin American and African
countries lagged behind.
Land is one type of natural resource that goes into production. The other type is raw materials
like mineral wealth or timber. The important point about these resources is that some of them
they are not renewable (like oil, coal, gas and other minerals), while others are: timer, fish etc.
It is important to take these concerns into consideration when talking about the ability of a
particular type of natural resource to act as the engine of growth.
The above is not true for technical progress, however, which neither depletes nor requires
renewing. An essential and important ingredient in the production process, the technical
121
img
Introduction to Economics ­ECO401
VU
knowledge/stock of a country is additive and cumulative and depends on the pace of invention,
innovation and learning by doing that is happening in the economy. In order to protect the
incentive to invent and innovate, governments introduce patent and copyright laws which grant
the inventor monopoly production rights for a certain period. Also governments directly or
indirectly fund research and development activities which are the engine for invention and
innovation.
Neo-classical thinking on growth:
Neo-classical thinking on growth is owed to Robert Solow whose exogenous growth
models in the mid-20th century remained the most influential work in the area till the late 1980s
when endogenous growth theories revolutionized thinking in this area.
Based on the principle of diminishing returns to capital, the main theses of the neo-classical
exogenous growth theory were:
a. The steady-state growth rate of real GDP depends on n and t, the exogenous rates of
growth of population and technology. By exogenous, we mean determined outside the
model. Thus, there were no policy insights for how governments could affect the steady
state growth rates of countries. In particular, the model suggested that higher savings
could only have a level effect on income, not a long-term growth effect as had been
earlier thought. The reason was that savings-enabled investment and capital
accumulation eventually banged into diminishing returns.
b. If one country started with lower income and capital than another country, then the
poorer country would grow faster in order to catch up with the richer country.
Eventually, both would grow at the same rate.
Major Weaknesses of Exogenous Growth Model:
Exogenous growth theory suffered from three major weaknesses:
i.  It could not explain why the gap between the poor and rich countries had widened
(anti-catch up),
ii. It could not explain why some countries in East Asia had apparently grown
consistently on the back of higher saving rates, and
iii. It modeled technology as exogenous, and beyond the influence of policy.
The first weakness was answerable within the neo-classical framework: the key insight was
that convergence would only be witnessed among countries with similar capital and income
levels to start with; countries with very low capital to start with might actually never grow out of
their poverty and could see their capital stock falling over time.
The second weakness was addressed by endogenous growth theory (endogenous because
the steady state growth rate was determined inside the model, not determined by factors
exogenous to it) which set up the model in a way that the steady state growth rate now
depended directly on the saving rate and level of technology. A permanent increase in the
saving rate, therefore, meant a permanent increase in the growth rate.
The third weakness was also addressed by endogenous growth theory, which by using
different industry structures and technology functions specifications could link technological
progress to conscious R&D effort by firms and government. Non-diminishing returns to
technical progress would then generate endogenous growth.
122
Table of Contents:
  1. INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS:Economic Systems
  2. INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS (CONTINUED………):Opportunity Cost
  3. DEMAND, SUPPLY AND EQUILIBRIUM:Goods Market and Factors Market
  4. DEMAND, SUPPLY AND EQUILIBRIUM (CONTINUED……..)
  5. DEMAND, SUPPLY AND EQUILIBRIUM (CONTINUED……..):Equilibrium
  6. ELASTICITIES:Price Elasticity of Demand, Point Elasticity, Arc Elasticity
  7. ELASTICITIES (CONTINUED………….):Total revenue and Elasticity
  8. ELASTICITIES (CONTINUED………….):Short Run and Long Run, Incidence of Taxation
  9. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION:CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
  10. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION (CONTINUED…………….)
  11. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION (CONTINUED…………….)The Indifference Curve Approach
  12. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION (CONTINUED…………….):Normal Goods and Giffen Good
  13. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS:PRODUCTIVE THEORY
  14. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):The Scale of Production
  15. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):Isoquant
  16. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):COSTS
  17. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):REVENUES
  18. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):PROFIT MAXIMISATION
  19. MARKET STRUCTURES:PERFECT COMPETITION, Allocative efficiency
  20. MARKET STRUCTURES (CONTINUED………..):MONOPOLY
  21. MARKET STRUCTURES (CONTINUED………..):PRICE DISCRIMINATION
  22. MARKET STRUCTURES (CONTINUED………..):OLIGOPOLY
  23. SELECTED ISSUES IN MICROECONOMICS:WELFARE ECONOMICS
  24. SELECTED ISSUES IN MICROECONOMICS (CONTINUED……………)
  25. INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS:Price Level and its Effects:
  26. INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS (CONTINUED………..)
  27. INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS (CONTINUED………..):The Monetarist School
  28. THE USE OF MACROECONOMIC DATA, AND THE DEFINITION AND ACCOUNTING OF NATIONAL INCOME
  29. THE USE OF MACROECONOMIC DATA, AND THE DEFINITION AND ACCOUNTING OF NATIONAL INCOME (CONTINUED……………..)
  30. MACROECONOMIC EQUILIBRIUM & VARIABLES; THE DETERMINATION OF EQUILIBRIUM INCOME
  31. MACROECONOMIC EQUILIBRIUM & VARIABLES; THE DETERMINATION OF EQUILIBRIUM INCOME (CONTINUED………..)
  32. MACROECONOMIC EQUILIBRIUM & VARIABLES; THE DETERMINATION OF EQUILIBRIUM INCOME (CONTINUED………..):The Accelerator
  33. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS
  34. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….)
  35. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Causes of Inflation
  36. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
  37. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):GROWTH
  38. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Land
  39. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Growth-inflation
  40. FISCAL POLICY AND TAXATION:Budget Deficit, Budget Surplus and Balanced Budget
  41. MONEY, CENTRAL BANKING AND MONETARY POLICY
  42. MONEY, CENTRAL BANKING AND MONETARY POLICY (CONTINUED…….)
  43. JOINT EQUILIBRIUM IN THE MONEY AND GOODS MARKETS: THE IS-LM FRAMEWORK
  44. AN INTRODUCTION TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND FINANCE
  45. PROBLEMS OF LOWER INCOME COUNTRIES:Poverty trap theories: