Investment, R&D, and Long-Run Growth

Specificaties
Paperback, 196 blz. | Engels
Springer Berlin Heidelberg | e druk, 2001
ISBN13: 9783540425281
Rubricering
Springer Berlin Heidelberg e druk, 2001 9783540425281
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Samenvatting

In the 1990s, growth theory has incorporated imperfect competition in its investigations. This innovation has proven to be seminal: Cleviating from growth models with perfect competition, the new framework featured forward­ looking entrepreneurs. Firms maximize profits intertemporarily, i. e. their in­ vestment leads to instantaneous sunk costs and offers flows of future profits. Firms finance this investment by launching shares. The capital market is per­ fectly competitive, implying that the return on a share is equal to the return on a bond. As opposed to the capital market, the goods market is imperfectly competitive. As a result of investment, firms enjoy market power. That is, firms may acquire the capability to provide a product that is differentiated in, e. g. , styling, technology, accessibility, or reputation. The launch of a dif­ ferentiated product allows to capture a market niche, and successful firms may price above marginal cost. The resulting profit flows are channelled to the firms' shareholders. The introduction of monopolistic competition into growth theory is valuable: real world economies may be portrayed rather by such an imperfect competition framework than by a perfect competition approach. Starting with Romer (1990), in growth theory, modeling of imperfect competition has been notoriously bound to a focus on the impact of research and development (R&D) on economic growth. In the existing literature, growth-affecting investment is restricted to R&D investment.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9783540425281
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:paperback
Aantal pagina's:196
Uitgever:Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Hoofdrubriek:Economie

Inhoudsopgave

I An Outline of Related Research.- 1 Literature on R&D-Based Growth.- 2 Evidence that Suggests a Broader View.- II Product Differentiation due to R&D.- 3 Expanding Product Variety.- 4 Improving Product Quality.- III Product Differentiation due to Investment.- 5 The Ramsey Model with Imperfect Competition.- 6 A Generalized AK Model.- 7 Learning-by-Doing and the Decline in the Relative Price of Capital.- IV R&D Revisited.- 8 R&D’s Exhaustion Effect.- 9 Quality Ladders and Excessive Growth.- 10 Growth without Scale Effects.- V Two-Stage Input Differentiation.- 11 R&D and Physical Capital.- 12 Skilled Workers: Schooling and Specialization.- Concluding Remarks.- Appendices.- A A Suggestive Procedure to Eliminate Scale Effects.- B Stability of the Steady-State Equilibrium in the Ramsey Model with Imperfect Competition.- C Stability of the Steady-State Equilibrium in the Models with Two-Stage Input Differentiation.- References.

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        Investment, R&D, and Long-Run Growth