ECON204 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Fixed Capital, Capital Accumulation, Technocracy Movement

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17 May 2018
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Topic 8
Technological progress has many dimensions. It may mean:
Larger quantities of output
Better products
New products
A larger variety of products
Technological progress in all 4 dimensions leads to increases in output for fixed capital and labour.
Technological progress increases AN (effective labour), reducing number of workers needed to
achieve a given amount of output.
Growth rate of effetive laour is 
Output and capital per effective worker.
Remember that I = sY.
The relation between output per effective worker and capital per effective worker.
 
The relation between investment per effective worker and capital per effective worker.
 
The investment needed to maintain capital per effective worker from depreciation and growth of
effective workers.
I =(+) K
The investment per effective worker needed to maintain a constant level of capital per effective
worker is:
  
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Dynamics of Capital and Output
In steady state,
Y/AN and K/AN is constant (numerator and denominator grow at the same rate of ).
Hence, the steady state of the economy is also called a state of balanced growth.
Y/N and K/N grow at the rate of technological progress
N grows at , while Y and K grow at 
The growth rate of output is independent of the saving rate.
Remarks:
Higher δ,  reduce Y/AN and K/AN in steady state because more economic
resources are spent to maintain this level of growth, leaving less for output and capital
accumulation.
Determinants of Technological Progress
Tehologial progress is the result of firs researh ad developet ‘&D ativities. The
outcome of R&D is fundamentally ideas.
o Australia spends 2.3% of GDP on R&D (= OECD average, US: 2.8%))
Success of amount spent on R&D depends on:
o The fertility of research, -- new ideas and new products, through basic and applied
research
o The appropriability of research -- or the extent to which firms benefit from the
results of R&D. Patents and market size are critical
Conclusions:
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Document Summary

Larger quantities of output: better products, new products, a larger variety of products. Technological progress in all 4 dimensions leads to increases in output for fixed capital and labour. Technological progress increases an (effective labour), reducing number of workers needed to achieve a given amount of output. The relation between output per effective worker and capital per effective worker. The relation between investment per effective worker and capital per effective worker. The investment needed to maintain capital per effective worker from depreciation and growth of effective workers. The investment per effective worker needed to maintain a constant level of capital per effective worker is: The growth rate of output is independent of the saving rate. Remarks: higher , (cid:1859) or (cid:1859) reduce y/an and k/an in steady state because more economic resources are spent to maintain this level of growth, leaving less for output and capital accumulation.

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