Unit 6 - Economic Growth and Productivity
Economic Growth and Productivity
- Economic Growth Defined
- Sustained increase in Real GDP over time.
- Sustained increase in Real GDP per Capita over time.
- Why Grow?
- Growth leads to greater prosperity for society.
- Lessens the burden of scarcity.
- Increases the general level of well-being.
- Conditions for Growth
- Rule of Law
- Sound Legal and Economic Institutions
- Economic Freedom
- Respect for Private Property
- Political & Economic Stability
- Low Inflationary Expectations
- Willingness to sacrifice current consumption in order to grow
- Saving
- Trade
- Physical Capital
- Tools, machinery, factories, infrastructure
- Physical Capital is the product of investment
- Investment is sensitive to interest rates and expected rates of return.
- It takes capital to make capital.
- Capital must be maintained.
- Technology & Productivity
- Research and development, innovation and invention yield increases in available technology.
- More technology in the hands of workers increases productivity.
- Productivity is output per worker.
- More Productivity = Economic Growth
- Human Capital
- People are a country's most important resource. Therefore human capital must be developed.
- Education
- Economic Freedom
- The right to acquire private property
- Incentives
- Clean Water
- Stable Food Supply
- Access to technology
- Hindrances to Growth
- Economic and Political Instability
- High inflationary expectations
- Absence of the rule of law
- Diminished Private Property Rights
- Negative Incentives
- Lack of Savings
- Excess current consumption
- Failure to maintain existing capital
- Crowding Out of Investment
- Government deficits and debt increasing long term interest rates
- Increased income inequality ---> Populist policies
- Restriction on Free International Trade
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