ECON213 Chapter Notes - Chapter 3: Bisquick, Diminishing Returns, Longrun

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His conclusion surprised many, and still surprises many today: investment in machinery cannot be a source of growth in the long run. Solow argued that the only possible source of growth in the long run is technological change. Economists call the belief that increasing buildings and machinery is the fundamental determinant of growth capital fundamentalism. Whether capital fundamentalism holds is fiercely debated in the academic literature on growth; we willsee in the next chapter what happens when the notion of capital is extended to include skills and education-human capital. In this chapter,we will see that capital fundamentalism is incompatible with people respond to incentives. When we say growth, what wemean is that each person"s standard of living should keepincreasing. The only way that wecan have ahigher standard living for each of us, on average, is if each of us produces moregoods, on average. So what we areinterested in is production per worker, sometimes called labor productivity.

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