ECON 101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Human Capital, System On A Chip, Production Function

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2 Mar 2017
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Recall one of the ten principles from ch. 1: a (cid:272)ou(cid:374)t(cid:396)y"s sta(cid:374)da(cid:396)d of li(cid:448)i(cid:374)g depe(cid:374)ds o(cid:374) its a(cid:271)ility to p(cid:396)odu(cid:272)e goods a(cid:374)d services. This ability depends on productivity, the average quantity of goods and services produced per unit of labor input. Y= real gdp, quantity of output produced. L=quantity of labor so productivity= y/l output per worker. When a natio(cid:374)"s (cid:449)o(cid:396)ke(cid:396)s a(cid:396)e (cid:448)e(cid:396)y p(cid:396)odu(cid:272)ti(cid:448)e, (cid:396)eal gdp is la(cid:396)ge a(cid:374)d i(cid:374)(cid:272)o(cid:373)es a(cid:396)e high. When productivity grows rapidly, so do living standards. Recall: the stock of equipment and structures used to produce goods and services is called. Productivity is higher when average worker has more capital (machines, equipment, etc) I. e. an increase in k/l causes an increase in y/l. Human capital (h): the knowledge and skills workers acquire through education, training, and experience. Productivity is higher when the average worker has more human capital (education, skills, etc) i. e. an increase h/l causes an increase in y/l.

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