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The Solow Model and Ideas

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    We've covered a lot of the Super Simple Solow Model.
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    We've looked at the dynamics of capital accumulation,
    how changes in savings rates influence growth,
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    and we've looked look at some of the
    predictions of the Solow Model.
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    One thing we've learned is that
    the model seems to inevitably predict
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    that we end up in a steady state
    with no growth.
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    Now, however, we're going to turn
    to the last of our variables: ideas.
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    Can ideas keep us growing?
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    Better ideas mean that we get more bang for our buck,
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    more output from the
    same inputs of capital and labor.
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    Alternatively, we can think about
    this as increasing our productivity.
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    Henry Ford, for example, took ideas
    from lots of other industries,
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    like meatpacking, bicycle making, and brewing,
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    and combined them in a way that
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    had never before been used in
    the manufacturing of automobiles.
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    This novel combination of ideas
    sparked a dramatic increase in productivity
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    that transformed the world.
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    The same types of processes -
    they're continuing today,
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    and in all industries, increasing output per
    worker across the economies.
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    So let's go back to our previous
    graph of capital and output.
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    We can now add ideas as a multiplier.
    better ideas multiply the
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    Better ideas multiply the
    output from the same capital stock.
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    So, if A increases from one to 2,
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    that's a doubling of our productivity.
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    And that shift the output curve up.
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    When output doubles, so does investment.
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    Now, once again, investment
    is greater than depreciation.
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    So we begin accumulating capital once again.
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    And that further boosts our output.
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    So better ideas spur more output,
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    which creates more investment,
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    which leads to capital accumulation.
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    So better ideas lead to growth in two ways.
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    The increased productivity of a given capital stock,
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    and the increase investment,
    which increases capital accumulation.
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    Now imagine that ideas are constantly improving.
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    You'd have continual shifts upward
    of the output curve.
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    And that means continual
    shifts upward of the investment curve.
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    We always stay to the left of
    the steady state,
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    and there, we continually grow.
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    So growth at the cutting edge -
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    it's determined by how fast new ideas are formed,
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    and how much those new ideas increase our productivity.
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    So that's our Super Simple Solow Model.
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    It combines a model of catching
    up growth due to capital accumulation,
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    with a model of cutting edge growth
    due to idea accumulation.
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    If you want to dive further into the Solow Model,
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    Check out our textbook, "Modern Principles."
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    We also have more material in our
    Development Economics course.
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    In that course, we'll add population growth to the model.
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    and dive deeper into the data
    to see how well the model predicts.
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    We'll find some things it predicts really well,
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    and other things not so much.
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    Finally, since ideas drive growth
    on the cutting edge,
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    we'd like to know what factors help
    to spur the creation of new ideas.
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    This topic is a personal favorite of mine,
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    and it's up next.
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Title:
The Solow Model and Ideas
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Marginal Revolution University
Project:
Macro
Duration:
04:03

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