Sasaki, Hiroaki (2024): The Paradox of Technological Progress, Growth, Distribution, and Employment in a Demand-led Framework.
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_121694.pdf Download (157kB) | Preview |
Abstract
This study builds a Kaleckian model that incorporates endogenous technological progress and investigates how a change in a parameter that directly fosters technological progress affects growth and distribution. In this model, there is an optimal wage share that maximizes the technological progress rate. Accordingly, if the actual wage share can be moved to an optimal level, the economic growth rate will increase. This analysis reveals that a policy that directly promotes technological progress consequently decreases the long-run equilibrium value of the wage share, the capacity utilization rate, the employment rate, and the economic growth rate.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | The Paradox of Technological Progress, Growth, Distribution, and Employment in a Demand-led Framework |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | endogenous technological progress; education; R\&D; growth and distribution |
Subjects: | E - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics > E1 - General Aggregative Models > E11 - Marxian ; Sraffian ; Kaleckian E - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics > E1 - General Aggregative Models > E12 - Keynes ; Keynesian ; Post-Keynesian E - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics > E2 - Consumption, Saving, Production, Investment, Labor Markets, and Informal Economy > E24 - Employment ; Unemployment ; Wages ; Intergenerational Income Distribution ; Aggregate Human Capital ; Aggregate Labor Productivity E - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics > E2 - Consumption, Saving, Production, Investment, Labor Markets, and Informal Economy > E25 - Aggregate Factor Income Distribution O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth > O3 - Innovation ; Research and Development ; Technological Change ; Intellectual Property Rights > O33 - Technological Change: Choices and Consequences ; Diffusion Processes O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth > O4 - Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity > O41 - One, Two, and Multisector Growth Models |
Item ID: | 121694 |
Depositing User: | Dr. Hiroaki Sasaki |
Date Deposited: | 17 Aug 2024 14:29 |
Last Modified: | 17 Aug 2024 14:29 |
References: | Bhaduri A. and Marglin S. (1990) ``Unemployment and the real wage: the economic basis for contesting political ideologies,'' Cambridge Journal of Economics 14 (4), 375--393. Blecker, R. A. (2002) ``Distribution, demand and growth in neo-Kaleckian macro-models,'' in Setterfield, M. (ed.) The Economics of Demand-led growth, challenging the supply side vision of the long run ; Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. Carvalho, L. B., Lima, G. T., and Serra, G. P. (2024) ``Household debt, knowledge capital accumulation, and macrodynamic performance,'' Journal of Post Keynesian Economics 47 (1), 84--116. Carpenter, R. E. and Petersen, B. C. (2002) ``Capital market imperfections, high-tech investment, and new equity financing,'' The Economic Journal 112, 54--72. Cassetti, M. (2003) ``Bargaining power, effective demand and technical progress: a Kaleckian model of growth,'' Cambridge Journal of Economics 27 (3), 449--464. Charles, S. (2008) ``Corporate debt, variable retention rate and the appearance of financial fragility, Cambridge Journal of Economics 32, 781--795. Drandakis, E. M. and Phelps, E. S. (1966) ``A model of induced invention, growth and distribution,'' The Economic Journal 76 (304), 823--840. Dutt, A. K. (1987) ``Alternative closures again: a comment of growth, distribution, and inflation,'' Cambridge Journal of Economics 11 (1), 75--82. Dutt, A. K. (1992) ``Conflict inflation, distribution, cyclical accumulation and crises,'' European Journal of Political Economy 8 (4), 579--597. Dutt, A. K. (2006) ``Aggregate demand, aggregate supply and economic growth,'' International Review of Applied Economics 20 (3), 319--336. Dutt. A. K. and Veneziani, R. (2019) ``Education and `human capitalist' in a classical--Marxian model of growth and distribution,'' Cambridge Journal of Economics 43, 481--506. Dutt. A. K. and Veneziani, R. (2020) ``A classical model of education, growth, and distribution,'' Macroeconomic Dynamics 24, 1186--1221. Fazzari, S. M., Hubbard, R. G., and Peterson, B. C. (1988) ``Financing constraints and corporate investment,'' Brooking Papers on Economic Activity 1988 (1), 141--206. Flaschel, P. and Skott, P. (2006) ``Steindlian models of growth and stagnation,'' Metroeconomica 57 (3), 303--338. Hall, B. H. (2002) ``The financing of research and development,'' Oxford Review of Economic Policy 18 (1), 35--51. Hayashi, F. and Inoue, T. (1991) ``The relation between firm growth and Q with multiple capital goods: theory and evidence from panel data on Japanese firms,'' Econometrica 59 (3), 731--753. Hicks, J. R. (1932) The Theory of Wages, London: Macmillan. Himmelberg, C. P. and Petersen, B. C. (1994) ``R\&D and internal finance: a panel study of small firms in high-tech industries,'' The Review of Economics and Statistics 76 (1), 38--51. Hoshi, T., Kashyap, A., and Scharfstein, D. (1991) ``Corporate structure, liquidity, and investment: evidence from Japanese industrial groups,'' The Quarterly Journal of Economics 106 (1), 33--60. Kaldor, N. (1966) ``Causes of the slow rate of economic growth in the United Kingdom,'' reprinted in N. Kaldor (1978) Further Essays on Economic Theory, London: Duckworth. Kalecki, M. (1971) Selected Essays on the Dynamics of the Capitalist Economy Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Kennedy, C. (1964) ``Induced bias in innovation and the theory of distribution,'' The Economic Journal 74 (295), 541--547. Lima, G. T. (2004) ``Endogenous technological innovation, capital accumulation and distributional dynamics,'' Metroeconomica 55 (4), 386--408. Lima, G. T., Carvalho, L., and Serra, G. P. (2021) ``Human capital accumulation, income distribution, and economic growth: a demand-led analytical framework,'' Review of Keynesian Economics 9 (3), 319--336. Marglin, S. and Bhaduri, A. (1990) Profit Squeeze and Keynesian Theory in S. Marglin and J. Schor (eds.) The Golden Age of Capitalism: Reinterpreting the Postwar Experience, Oxford: Clarendon Press. Marx, K. (1867) Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Vol. I. London: Lawrence and Wishart. Ndikumana, L. (1999) ``Debt service, financing constraints, and fixed investment: evidence from panel data,'' Journal of Post Keynesian Economics 21 (3), 455--478. Rowthorn, R. E. (1977) ``Conflict, inflation, and money,'' Cambridge Journal of Economics 1 (3), 215--239. Rowthorn, R. E. (1981) ``Demand, real wages and economic growth,'' Thames Papers in Political Economy, Autumn, 1--39. Sasaki, H. (2010) ``Endogenous technological change, income distribution, and unemployment with inter-class conflict,'' Structural Change and Economic Dynamics 21 (2), 123--134. Sasaki, H. (2013) ``Cyclical growth in a Goodwin--Kalecki--Marx Model,'' Journal of Economics 108 (2), 145--171. Sasaki, H. and Fujita, S. (2012) ``The importance of the retention ratio in a Kaleckian model with debt accumulation,'' Metroeconomica 63 (3), 417--428. Serra, G. P. (2023) ``Household debt, student loan forgiveness, and human capital investment: a neo-Kaleckian approach,'' Journal of Post Keynesian Economics 46 (1), 173--206. Skott, P. (2012) ``Theoretical and empirical shortcomings of the Kaleckian investment function,'' Metroeconomica 63 (1), 109--138. Tavani, D., Flaschel, P., and Taylor, L. (2011) ``Estimated non-linearities and multiple equilibria in a model of distributive-demand cycles,'' International Review of Applied Economics 25 (5), 519--538. Tavani, D. and Zamparelli, L. (2017) ``Endogenous technical change in alternative theories of growth and distribution,'' Journal of Economic Surveys 31 (5), 1272--1303. Tavani, D. and Zamparelli, L. (2020) ``Growth, income distribution, and the `entrepreneurial state','' Journal of Evolutionary Economics 30, 117--141. Tavani, D. and Zamparelli, L. (2021) ``Labor-augmenting technical change and the wage share: new microeconomic foundations,'' Structural Change and Economic Dynamics 56, 27--34. Taylor, L., Foley, D. K., and Rezai, A. (2019) ``Demand drives growth all the way: Goodwin, Kaldor, Pasinetti and the Steady State,'' Cambridge Journal of Economics 43, 1333--1352. Verdoorn, P. J. (1949) ``Fattori che regolano lo sviluppo della produttivit`a del lavoro,'' L'Industria 1, pp. 14--28 (``Factors that determine the growth of labour productivity,'' translated by A. P. Thirlwall in J. McCombie, M. Pugno and B. Soro (eds.) Productivity Growth and Economic Performance: Essays on Verdoorn's Law, London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002). Von Weizs\"acker, C. C. (1966) ``Tentative notes on a two-sector model with induced technical progress,'' Review of Economic Studies 33 (3), 245--252. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/121694 |