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The AK Growth Model: Endogenous Growth: A Brute Force Approach

The document discusses the AK growth model, an endogenous growth model where the savings rate affects the long-run growth rate. It explains that the AK model avoids diminishing returns by setting the capital share of income, α, equal to 1. This results in a production function of Y=AK, where growth is perpetual as long as the savings rate exceeds depreciation. The document also discusses how the AK model influenced policy debates by suggesting tax cuts could provide large growth benefits, and reviews some shortcomings of the model, such as its assumption that externalities must be substantial.

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Srijit Sanyal
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
74 views

The AK Growth Model: Endogenous Growth: A Brute Force Approach

The document discusses the AK growth model, an endogenous growth model where the savings rate affects the long-run growth rate. It explains that the AK model avoids diminishing returns by setting the capital share of income, α, equal to 1. This results in a production function of Y=AK, where growth is perpetual as long as the savings rate exceeds depreciation. The document also discusses how the AK model influenced policy debates by suggesting tax cuts could provide large growth benefits, and reviews some shortcomings of the model, such as its assumption that externalities must be substantial.

Uploaded by

Srijit Sanyal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The AK Growth Model

Econ 4960: Economic Growth

Endogenous Growth: A Brute Force Approach


! The reason there is no long-run growth without TFP growth in the
Solow model is because of diminishing marginal returns to capital
assumed in Inada conditions.
! One can see that as long as limk sf ' (k ) < n + d the savings curve
will eventually cross the required investment line and there will be a
steady state.
! Alternatively, look at the capital dynamics in the Solow model:
.

K
= sAK 1 (n + d )
K

! So, capital growth goes to zero unless = 1


! Setting = 1 gives Y=AK, which is the AK model.
Econ 4960: Economic Growth

Solow Diagram for different values

Econ 4960: Economic Growth

The AK model

Econ 4960: Economic Growth

Endogenous Growth: A Brute Force Approach


! Use the capital accumulation equation:
.

K
Y
= s d = sA d
K
K
! Key points to note:
!

The economy is always on the balanced growth path (whereas in the Solow
model we can only talk about BGP for an economy that has completed the
transition)
Savings rate does affect the long-run growth rate

! An important shortcoming of this simple AK model is that when =


1, capital is the only factor of production, violating one of Kaldors
facts.
Econ 4960: Economic Growth

Growth through Externalities


! Romer (1986) and Lucas (1988) proposed two different
models that end up looking very similar to the AK model.
! Both models manage to circumvent the problem with
increasing returns (e.g., firms would like to produce an
infinite amount.)
!
!

Cobb-Douglas production for each firm: Y = AK L


Key assumption: A is determined at the aggregate level
1
as A = A K
whereas each firm takes A as given.
In other words, firms ignore that the capital they accumulate
at the aggregate level is a determinant of productivity.
Therefore, they create a positive externality on other firms.
Aggregate production function is:

Y = AK L1 = (A K 1 )K L1 = A KL1
Econ 4960: Economic Growth

The AK model and Policy Debates


! The fact that savings rate can affect the growth rate (and in a big
way) made the AK model very popular in policy discussions.
! It makes government policy potentially very important for
growth.
! In a famous paper, Lucas (1990) called tax cuts on savings as
the largest genuinely free lunch I have seen in 25 years in this
business.
! Even today when candidates fiercely debate tax policy, an
important part of discussion revolves around growth
Econ 4960: Economic Growth

The AK model and Policy Debates


! King and Rebelo (1990, JPE): The welfare effect of a 10
percent increase in income tax is 40 times larger in an (AK)
endogenous growth model (65% of consumption) than it is in a
neoclassical growth model (1.6% of consumption)
! Stokey and Rebelo (1995) and Lucas (1990) argue that if
endogenous growth models are calibrated to plausible values the
effect on welfare is not likely to be large.
! Note that this gift of the AK model is also its curse.
! Because if tax differences are so important for growth, how
come countries like Sweden with extremely high tax rates grow
as fast as the US?
Econ 4960: Economic Growth

Shortcomings of the AK model


! Growth is the outcome of accidents---actions that are
completely unintentional.
! Externalities must be substantial: For example, the capital
bought by an investor contributes twice as much to others
production than to his/her own. Same for human capital: Your
education benefits others more than it benefits you.
! Alternatively stated, the Social return on many types of
investments far exceed their private return.
! If externalities are really that big, individuals will typically find
a way to capitalize on them (A doctor will not distribute advise
on the street, etc.)
! Coefficient on externality must be exactly 1-alfa. Otherwise,
there will be no BGP
Econ 4960: Economic Growth

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