Economics 216: The Macroeconomics of Development - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Economics 216: The Macroeconomics of Development

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Title: Economics 216: The Macroeconomics of Development


1
Economics 216The Macroeconomics of Development
  • Lawrence J. Lau, Ph. D., D. Soc. Sc. (hon.)
  • Kwoh-Ting Li Professor of Economic Development
  • Department of Economics
  • Stanford University
  • Stanford, CA 94305-6072, U.S.A.
  • Spring 2000-2001
  • Email ljlau_at_stanford.edu WebPages
    http//www.stanford.edu/ljlau

2
Lecture 7Two-Sector Models of Economic Growth
  • Lawrence J. Lau, Ph. D., D. Soc. Sc. (hon.)
  • Kwoh-Ting Li Professor of Economic Development
  • Department of Economics
  • Stanford University
  • Stanford, CA 94305-6072, U.S.A.
  • Spring 2000-2001
  • Email ljlau_at_stanford.edu WebPages
    http//www.stanford.edu/ljlau

3
Two-Sector Models of Economic Growth vsModels of
the Dual Economy
  • Two-Sector Models Consumption goods sector
    versus Investment goods sector
  • Dual Economy Models Agricultural (traditional)
    sector versus Industrial (modern) sector

4
Two-Sector ModelsThe Assumption of Non-Joint
Production
  • Each sector produces its output with its own
    exclusive inputs--there is no joint production,
    no externality, no spillover
  • Thus, Yi Fi (Ki , Li), i 1, 2
  • Production functions satisfy the assumptions of
  • Monotonicity
  • Concavity
  • Constant returns to scale
  • F(0, 0) 0

5
The Assumption of Full Employment
  • There is full employment of both capital and
    labor
  • Thus, K1 K2 K L1 L2 L
  • The production possibility frontier in Y1-Y2
    space for given K and L is in general not a
    straight line

6
The Assumption of Perfectly Competitive Output
and Factor Markets
  • The values of the marginal products of labor are
    equal to the (single) wage rate
  • Zero intersectoral wage differential
  • The values of the marginal products of capital
    are equal to the (single) rental rate of capital

7
The Assumptions of Perfect Mobility of Factors
  • Capital and labor can be instantaneously
    reallocated from one sector to the other
  • Identical rates of depreciation of capital
  • No need for forward-looking assumptions (there
    are no mistakes that cannot be instantaneously
    undone)
  • Alternative assumptions
  • Irreversibility
  • Putty-Clay (ex ante substitutibility and ex post
    fixed coefficients)--vintage of the capital goods
    matters (vintage can also matter if there is
    embodied technical progress)

8
Assumptions on Savings Behavior
  • Capitalists save and workers consume
  • The assumption of a constant proportion of
    profits saved will have almost identical
    implications
  • Profits are reinvested entirely in investment
    goods wages are expended entirely on consumer
    goods
  • Alternative assumption
  • Savings rate as a function of real output (per
    capita) and of the rate of return on capital
  • Savings behavior determines the outputs of the
    consumption and investment goods

9
The Existence ofa Steady State Level of the
Capital/Labor Ratio
  • Possible instability in two-sector models
  • A sufficient (but not necessary) condition for
    stability is the Capital-Intensity Hypothesis
  • At the same factor prices, the optimal
    capital-labor ratio in the consumption goods
    sector is higher than the optimal capital-labor
    ratio in the investment goods sector
  • An exogenous rate of growth of population
  • Labor-augmenting technical progress (identical
    across the two sectors)
  • Solow (1961)

10
Models of the Dual EconomyEconomic Development
with Surplus Labor
  • W. Arthur Lewis (1954), Gustav Ranis and John C.
    H. Fei (1961), Dale W. Jorgenson (1961)
  • Output of the agricultural sector depends only on
    the quantities of labor and land (which is
    assumed to be fixed)
  • Marginal product of labor 0 in the agricultural
    sector
  • Labor is paid the (institutionally determined)
    minimum subsistence real wage w/P1
  • Output of the industrial sector depends on the
    quantities of capital and labor
  • For given quantity of capital in the industrial
    sector, labor is employed in the industrial
    sector until the value of its marginal product is
    equal to w, the minimum subsistence wage rate (gt
    0)

11
The Assumption of Zero Marginal Productivity of
Labor in the Agricultural Sector
  • Is it true?
  • Seasonality in the demand for agricultural labor
  • Qualitatively what is important about the
    assumption is that agricultural output is not
    appreciably reduced with the migration of labor
    from the agricultural sector and that the real
    wage rate in the agricultural sector is
    unaffected by the migration (hence labor during
    the labor-surplus phase is paid more than its
    marginal product in agriculture)

12
The Evolution of a Labor-Surplus Economy
  • In the base period there is only an agricultural
    sector
  • The economy is in long-run steady-state
    equilibrium
  • Average real output per capita is equal to the
    minimum subsistence real wage
  • All output is consumed
  • There is no saving, no investment, and no capital
    accumulation

13
An Exogenous Increasein Agricultural Output per
Capita
  • Technical progress (green revolution), land
    reform, demographic change (epidemic, famine, or
    war), or foreign aid
  • Excess output over subsistence consumption is
    invested in the industrial sector (either by the
    landlords or by the government)
  • Labor is transferred from the agricultural sector
    to the industrial sector until the value of the
    marginal product of labor is equal to the minimum
    subsistence wage rate in the industrial sector (a
    wage gap is possible, e.g., cost of living
    differential, expected wage rate taking into
    account the possibility of unemployment,
    efficiency wage in the industrial sector)

14
Capital Accumulation
  • Agricultural surplus further increases because of
    the movement of labor from the agricultural
    sector to the industrial sector (without a
    decline in agricultural output)
  • Profits in the industrial sector are assumed to
    be saved and invested in the industrial sector
  • Industrial workers consume only agricultural wage
    goods
  • Movement of labor continues from the agricultural
    sector to the industrial sector until the
    marginal product of labor increases from zero to
    the minimum subsistence real wage in the
    agricultural sector

15
The End of the Labor-Surplus Phase
  • Once the marginal productivity of labor in the
    agricultural sector rises above the minimum
    subsistence real wage, the wage rate faced by the
    industrial sector will begin to rise
  • Labors share in the industrial sector will now
    exceed minimum subsistence consumption
  • Part of industrial output will begin to be
    consumed
  • Per capita real consumption will begin to
    riseprior to this point all increases in output
    are assumed to be saveda plausible assumption
  • Agricultural surplus will begin to diminish

16
Refinements
  • Models of internal migration (Harris-Todaro)
  • Capital in agricultural production
  • Terms of trade between the agricultural and
    industrial sectors
  • Inter-sectoral intermediate inputs

17
Multi-Sectoral Models of Growth
  • Balanced growth in steady state (Von Neumann)
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