A Model of Growth Through Creative Destruction
Philippe Aghion,Peter Howitt +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a model of endogenous growth is developed in which vertical innovations, generated by a competitive research sector, constitute the underlying source of growth and equilibrium is determined by a forward-looking difference equation, according to which the amount of research in any period depends upon the expected amount of the research next period.
read more
Abstract: A model of endogenous growth is developed in which vertical innovations, generated by a competitive research sector, constitute the underlying source of growth. Equilibrium is determined by a forward-looking difference equation, according to which the amount of research in any period depends upon the expected amount of research next period. One source of this intertemporal relationship is creative destruction. That is, the prospect of more future research discourages current research by threatening to destroy the rents created by current research. The paper analyzes the positive and normative properties of stationary equilibria, in which research employment is constant and GNP follows a random walk with drift, although under some circumstances cyclical equilibria also exist. Both the average growth rate and the variance of the growth rate are increasing functions of the size of innovations, the size of the skilled labor force, and the productivity of research as measured by a parameter indicating the effect of research on the Poisson arrival rate of innovations; and decreasing functions of the rate of time preference of the representative individual. Under laissez faire the economy's growth rate may be more or less than optimal because, in addition to the appropriability and intertemporal spillover effects of other endogenous growth models, which tend to make growth slower than optimal, the model also has effects that work in the opposite direction. In particular, the fact that private research firms do not internalize the destruction of rents generated by their innovations introduces a business-stealing effect similar to that found in the partial-equilibrium patent race literature. When we endogenize the size of innovations we find that business stealing also makes innovations too small.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Banking deregulation and innovation
TL;DR: In this article, the authors find that intrastate banking deregulation, which increased the local market power of banks, decreased the level and risk of innovation by young, private firms.
482
Social capital, innovation and growth: evidence from Europe
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the interplay between social capital, innovation and economic growth in the European Union and found that higher innovation performance is conducive to economic growth and that social capital affects growth indirectly by fostering innovation.
479
Does technological innovation reduce CO2 emissions?Cross-country evidence
Yang Chen,Chien-Chiang Lee +1 more
TL;DR: Based on the data of BP Statistical Review of World Energy, KOF Globalization Index, and the World Development Indicators, the authors explores the impact of technological innovation on CO2 emissions in a panel of 96 countries over the period 1996-2018 with spatial econometric models.
478
Human Capital, the Structure of Production and Growth
TL;DR: This article found that countries with higher initial education levels experienced faster value-added and employment growth in schooling-intensive industries in the 1980s and 1990s, consistent with schooling fostering the adoption of new technologies if such technologies are skilled-labor augmenting.
Technological Revolutions and Stock Prices
Lubos Pastor,Pietro Veronesi +1 more
TL;DR: The authors developed a general equilibrium model in which stock prices of innovative firms exhibit "bubbles" during technological revolutions and found empirical support for the model's predictions in 1830−1861 and 1992−2005 when the railroad and Internet technologies spread in the United States.
References
Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a fully specified model of long-run growth in which knowledge is assumed to be an input in production that has increasing marginal productivity, which is essentially a competitive equilibrium model with endogenous technological change.
On the mechanics of economic development
TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider the prospects for constructing a neoclassical theory of growth and international trade that is consistent with some of the main features of economic development, and compare three models and compared to evidence.
21.5K
•Book
The Theory of Industrial Organization
Jean Tirole
- 01 Jan 1988
TL;DR: The Theory of Industrial Organization as discussed by the authors is the first primary text to treat the new industrial organization at the advanced-undergraduate and graduate level Rigorously analytical and filled with exercises coded to indicate level of difficulty, it provides a unified and modern treatment of the field with accessible models that are simplified to highlight robust economic ideas.
Large Shareholders and Corporate Control
Andrei Shleifer,Robert W. Vishny +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore a model in which the presence of a large minority shareholder provides a partial solution to the free-rider problem in a corporation with many small owners, where the corporation may not pay any one of them to monitor the performance of the management.
9.3K
Monopolistic competition and optimum product diversity
Avinash Dixit,Joseph E. Stiglitz +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, Pettengill tests whether there is an excessive number of firms in a monopolistically competitive equilibrium by a device of considerable expository merit, and redistributes the resources thus released equally over the remaining firms in the sector, to see if welfare can be improved.